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The AMERICAN
♦
FOREIQN SERVICE
PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION ♦
INFORMATION AS TO POLICIES AND PROCEDURES Better administration of members’ insurance coverage will result if they will be guided by the
following information.
1. The American Foreign Service Protective Association is a non-profit, incorporated organiza¬ tion of Foreign Service Officers, Reserve Officers and Staff Officers and employees attached or assigned to the Department of State, USIA or 1CA. It is entirely separate from the American Foreign Service Association and membership in one has no effect on membership in the other. The Protective Association has as it only activity the administration of a program of Group Life, Accidental Death & Dismemberment, and Health Benefits Insurance. There are no fees or dues and members pay only the premiums for the insurance they carry.
2. Correspondence with and payments to the two Associations should he kept completely sepa¬ rate. Both Associations may be addressed c/o Department of State, Washington 25, D. C. The office address of the Protective Association is: 1908 G Street, N.W., Washington 6. D. C. The office address of the Foreign Service Association is: Room 301, 1742 G Street, N.W., Wash¬ ington 6, D. C.
3. Group Life Insurance is underwritten hv the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States. Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Association underwrites the Accidental Death & Dis¬ memberment Insurance; also the Health Benefits Insurance of the Foreign Service Benefit Plan. Members should correspond directly with the Protective Association about all matters re¬ lating to tlieir insurance mentioned; NOT with the underwriters. Delays will result if corre¬ spondence is addressed to the underwriters. The Protective Association keeps all records and accounts relating to the group insurance program, so the underwriters refer to the Association any corespondence they may receive from members.
4. Members are urged to inform the Protective Association promptly regarding, (a) retirement from active service, (b) resignation from government service or from the Protective Associa¬ tion, (c) transfer from one Department or Agency of the Government to another, (d) desire to cancel or to change their insurance coverage, (e) changes of address for those carrying Group Life, and (f) all matters relating to claims.
5. All master insurance contracts with our underwriters, except the Foreign Service Benefit Plan that is governed by the Federal Employees Health Benefits Act of 1959, are dated March 1st. Consequently, the insurance year of the Protective Association runs from March 1 through February 28.
6. Premiums for Group Life Insurance are due and payable at least quarterly in advance on March 1, June 1, September 1 and December 1, hut members are urged to pay them annually or semi-annually in advance. Members are not charged any premium for their Dependent Group Life Insurance nor for their Accidental Death & Dismemberment Insurance. When premiums are 90 days or more in arrears all of the insurance mentioned in this paragraph must he cancelled. Quarterly premium notices are mailed to members about 30 days in ad¬ vance of due dates.
7. The employee’s share of the premium for the Foreign Service Benefit Plan is paid by payroll deduction, not allotment. No payroll allotments may be used to pay Protective Association premiums.
8. Dependent Group Life Insurance and Accidental Death & Dismemberment Insurance are avail¬ able only to members who carry the Group Life Insurance for themselves. They are not avail¬ able separately from the latter coverage.
9. Insurance carried by members is evidenced by the following: The Equitable Life Assurance Society certificate for Policy 2962 for Group Life Insur¬ ance of the member, together with the rider for dependent group life insurance; Mutual of Omaha certificate for Policy GMG 1748 for Accidental Death & Dismember¬ ment insurance of the member; A Certificate and the current Brochure of the Foreign Service Benefit Plan issued by the Civil Service Commission. The Certificate and claim forms are distributed by the Protec¬ tive Association.
♦
Address applications and inquiries to:
THE AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION
c/o Oepartmcnt of State. Washington 25, O. C., or
1908 G Street, N.W., Washington 6, D. C.
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1
The Foreign Service Journal is the professional journal of the American For¬ eign Service and is published by the American Foreign Service Association, a non¬ profit private organization. Material appearing herein represents the opinions of the writers and is not intended to indicate the official views of the Department of State or of the Foreign Service as a whole.
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE ASSOCIATION
LIVINGSTON T. MERCHANT, President
DAVID MCK. KEY, General Manager
BARBARA P. CHALMERS, Executive Secretary
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
WILLIAM L. BLUE, Chairman
NORRIS S. HASELTON, Vice Chairman
JOAN M. CLARK, Secretary-Treasurer
WILLIAM 0. BOSWELL
SAMUEL R. GAMMON, III
JOHN J. HARTER
MARTIN F. HERZ
ROGERS B. HORCAN
RICHARD A. POOLE
THOMAS D. QUINN
CONTENTS OCTOBER, 1961 Volume 38, No. 10
page
20 FOREIGN POLICY AND NATIONAL MORALITY
by Arthur M. Sc hie singer, Jr.
23 MODERN ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES
by Harry H. Bell
30 A FOREIGN SERVICE REMINISCENCE
by James 0„ Denby
The AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE ASSOCIATION is an un¬ official and voluntary association of the members, active and retired, of the Foreign Service of the United States and the Department of State. The Association was formed in order to foster an esprit de corps among members of the Foreign Service and to establish a center around which might be grouped the united ef¬ forts of its members for the improvement of the Service.
Chiefs of Mission, FSO’s, FSR’s and FSS’s are eligible for active membership. American employees of other Departments or Agencies such as USIA and AID, who hold career status and who are on foreign service, are eligible for associate membership. Annual dues for both categories are $10.00 which includes a subscription to the JOURNAL. Those interested in membership should write to the General Manager, AFSA, Suite 301, 1742 “G” St., N.YV., Washington 6, D. C.
JOURNAL EDITORIAL BOARD
WOODRUFF WALLNER, Chairman
HENRY C. RAMSEY, Vice Chairman
THEODORE L. ELIOT, JR.
HERMAN POLLACK
JACK R. PERRY
HEYWARD ISHAM
JOHN H. HOLDRIDCE
JOHN Y. MILLAR
GWEN BARROWS, Managing Editor
DAVID MCK. KEY, General Manager
JANE D. FISHBURNE, Editorial and Adv. Asst.
50 NOTES FROM A MARINE GUARD’S DIARY
by Edward R. Parauka
53 RETURN TO PARADISE
by WUnion Menard
departments
4 BIRTHS, MARRIAGES
14 TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO
by JamPS B. Stewart
28 WASHINGTON LETTER
by Gwen Barrows
35 THE BOOKSHELF
41 FOREIGN SERVICE READING LIST
56 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Editorial Board of the Foreign Service Journal considers all articles submitted. If accepted, the author will be paid at time of publication. Photographs accompanying ar¬ ticles will, if accepted, be purchased at one dollar each. Negatives and color transparencies are not acceptable. Photos should be black and white glossies, measuring approximately 7x9 inches, and should be mailed between extra heavy cardboard. Photos are not returned, and the Journal is not responsible for items sent in.
© American Foreign Service Association, 1961. The Foreign Service Journal is published monthly (rates: $4.00 a year, 50 cents a copy), by the American For¬ eign Service Association, 1712 *‘G*? St., N.W., Wash¬ ington, I). C.
Second-class postage paid at Washington, D. C. Printed in U.S.A. by Monumental Printing Company, Baltimore.
COVER by Lynn Millar
Shadow and Sunlight on the Costa Brava, Spain.
3
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
Aldea del Mar =. — * 7 American Foreign Service Protective Association .... II Cover American Motors Corporation 5 American School in Switzerland, The — 49 American Security and Trust Company . 31 Atlas Realty Corporation 44 Barclay, The — 33 Beam, James B., Distilling Company 14 Bed Rock Dogs International - 55 Begg, J. F., Incorporated 7 Bell, W., and Company 6 Bobbs-Merrill Company, The 34 Bowling Green Storage and Van Company . 32 Brewood, Engravers 48 Calvert School, The 42 Cavanaugh Shipping Company 42 Chase Manhattan Bank, The 44 Circle Florists 42 Container Transport International, Inc _ 43 D. C. Pharmaceutical Company . — 55 DeHaven & Townsend, Crouter & Bodine 55 deSibour, J. Blaise, and Company 55
DACOR 45
Diplomatic Appliance Corporation - 45 Farnsworth Reed, Ltd 34 Firestone Tire and Rubber Company 9 First National City Bank of New York 7 Ford International — - 18 Francis Scott Key Apartment Hotel — 44 General Electronics Incorporated 33 Grace Line 8 Hilltop House, Inc. 6 Intercontinental Hotels Corporation 11 International Sea Van, Inc —- 12 Jacob, James H. L., Inc. _ 48 Julia’s Pantry 45 McLachlen Banking Corporation - 16 Merchants Transfer and Storage Company _ 48 Miller, W. C. and A. N., Development Company 47 Mutual of Omaha 13 National Distillers Products Company 17,37,40 Park Central Hotel 49 Paxton Van Lines 50 Publicker International .. 10 Radin, Rhea-Realtor 49 Sea Pines Plantation Company 46 Seagram Distillers Corporation 19 Security Storage Company 31 Service Investment Corporation 10 State Department Federal Credit Union 47 Sutro Bros. & Co. : 49 Swartz, T. I., Sons 1 United Services Officers’ Insurance Association 46 United States Lines 10
Universum — 34 Waldorf-Astoria, The IV Cover Wanamaker, Sophia, Inc. 42 Whirlpool Corporation :— — 43 Zenith Radio Corporation 15
PHOTOS AND ART FOR OCTOBER
Lynn Millar, wife of FSO John Y. Millar, Cover and Autumn in Berlin, p. 2
Regional Briefing Conference, p. 16
AFSA luncheon photo, p. 21
Houplain, “Combat de Cavaliers,” courtesy of the Bader Gal¬ lery', p. 23
Hal W. Vaughan, USIA, Bengali, p. 26
Howard R. Simpson, USIA, cartoons, pp. 28, 36; also p. 35
Robert W. Rinden, “Life and Love in the Foreign Service,” p. 29
Marshall Hays Noble, photos, p. 28
Edward R. Parauka, photos of Budapest, p. 51
Daumier, “The Uprising,” from the Phillips Collection, p. 52
Wilmon Menard, photos of Tin Can Island, pp. 53, 54
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, “Concordia Maritale” and “A Peasant in Cloak and Tall Hat,” on loan from the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, currently at the National Gal¬ lery of Art, Cover III
New Ambassadors CHARLES F. DARLINGTON to the Republic oj Gabor
LINCOLN GORDON to Brazil EDMDND A. GULLION to the Republic oj the Congo
BIRTHS FLATIN. A son, Mark August, born to Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A.
Flatin on August 22, at Saint Paul, Minnesota. The Flatins are en route to Sydney, Australia.
GATCH. A daughter, Alice Clark, born to Mr. and Mrs. John N. Gatch, Jr., July 19, at Washington.
GREGORY. A daughter, Kathleen Faith, born to Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gregory, Jr., June 30, at Yokohama.
GWYNN. A daughter, Catherine Ann, born to Mr. and Mrs. John B. Gwynn on July 18, at Karachi.
HARTE. A daughter, Rita Rose, born to Mr. and Mrs. James P. Harte, July 28, at St. Louis, Missouri.
HESS. A son, Patrick Gardner, born to Mr. and Mrs. Clyde G. Hess, Jr., July 2, at Washington.
JOHNSTON. A daughter, Susan Beatrice, born to Mr. and Mrs. James R. Johnston. May 2. at San Jose.
LAINCEN. A son, Charles Winslow, born to Mr. and Mrs. L. Bruce Laingen, July 26, at Karachi.
MAKEPEACE. A son, Timothy, horn to Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Makepeace on August 15, at Karachi. Mr. Makepeace is Consul at Peshawar.
MARTIN. A daughter. Helen Elizabeth, born to Mr. and Mrs. S. Douglas Martin, June 15, at Washington.
WILLIAMSON. A son, Timothy Grafton, born to Mr. and Mrs. Larry C. Williamson, June 27, at Freetown, Sierra Leone.
MARRIAGES BAKEMEIER-STEWART. Marilyn Ann Bakemeier, daughter of
Mrs. Seymour Bakemeier of Washington, and Donald E. J. Stewart, son of the late Foreign Service Staff Officer Warren C. Stewart and Mrs. Stew'art, were married, August 19, at Washington.
BENCE-RUSK. Delcia Bence, daughter of Dr. Carlos Alberto Bence and Mrs. Delcia Elida Spinosa de Bence of Buenos Aires, and David Patrick Rusk, son of the Secretary of State and Mrs. Dean Rusk, were married on August 24 at the Holy Sacrament Basilica in Buenos Aires. The young couple are living in Berkeley, where both are students at the Uni¬ versity of California.
GERLACH-BLAIR. Catherine Gerlach of Chicago and William McCormick Blair, Jr., Ambassador to Denmark, were married on September 9, in the Frederiksborg Castle Church near Copenhagen.
GOODWIN-BRAGDON. Patricia Goodwin of Perth, Australia, a member of the Consulate staff for several years, and FSO Merritt C. Bragdon, Jr. were married on July 3. Mr. Bragdon is currently studying Russian at the FSI.
MASSIE-GLASOE. Donna Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clar¬ ence Massie, and FSO Paul John Glasoe were married August 19, at Hamburg, Germany, where Mr. Glasoe is assigned as Vice Consul.
MCCLURE-BUTRICK. Lyn McClure, daughter of Major General Mark McClure and Mrs. McClure, and Richard Porter Butrick. Jr., son of the Honorable Richard P. Butrick, FSO- retired, and Mrs. Butrick. were married August 12, in the Fort Myer Chapel, in Arlington, Va. The young couple is living in New York, where Mr. Butrick is attending Columbia Graduate School.
PALMER-GULLION. Patricia Anne Palmer, daughter of Mrs. John Joseph Palmer, and FSO Edmund Gullion, newly ap¬ pointed Ambassador to the Congo, were married on Septem¬ ber 2 in the Episcopal Church of the Epiphany in Danville, Va. Ambassador and Mrs. Gullion will make their home in Leopoldville.
4
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ton get compact car economy and handling case. Rambler gives you so much more than small foreign cars for so little difference in price.
You save through lowest initial cost anti maintenance.
You benefit from Rambler’s top resale value.
The 1961 Rambler is the ideal car for Foreign Service personnel! You can choose from 3 Ram¬ bler sizes — the 100-inch wheelbase Rambler American — the 108-inch wheelbase Rambler Classic 6 and V-8 —the 117-inch wheelbase Ambassador V-8 by Rambler. A car for every purpose to help every purse. The Compact Rambler—America’s No. 1 Success car—always in good taste, correct for any occasion.
For Further Information Mail This Coupon Today
American Motors offers its Diplomatic Purchase Price on the Rambler of your choice. The Administrative Office’s Personal Purchase File at American Embas¬ sies and Foreign Service Posts contains detailed spe¬ cifications and prices. But if not available, mail the adjoining coupon for full particulars. More than 3600 Rambler distributors and dealers around the world assure you the finest service.
American Motors Corp. • Automotive Export Division 14250 Plymouth Road, Detroit 32, Michigan
Please forward your complete details including prices of the 1961 Ramblers underyour Diplomatic Sales Program.
Name:
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Our WHOLESALE CATALOG is sent to the administrative officers of Embassies throughout the world. (They are not sent to individuals).
Wholesale Distributors Fine SILVERWARE - LUGGAGE - JEWELRY
Watches - Clocks • Giftware - Appliances Leather Goods - Houseivares
Largest Collection of • QUALITY MERCHANDISE
• LOWEST WHOLESALE PRICES (Available to Foreign Service Personnel)
• IMMEDIATE DELIVERY from Stock Visit our spacious wholesale showroom where you may make your leisurely selections.
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WASHINGTON’S D. C. CENTER
DEATHS BEHR. Frederic H. Behr, Jr., FSO, died of cancer on Septem¬
ber 11 at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Mr. Behr entered the Foreign Service in 1945 and served at Montreal, Duesseldorf, and Bonn. Last year he was one of the first five Foreign Service officers selected for the exchange program with the Defense Department.
BUCKNELL. John A. C. Bucknell, a Foreign Service Reserve Officer and son of Howard Bucknell, FSO-retired, was drowned off the island of Corsica, on June 10. He had been assigned to the Embassy at Bern.
FISHER. William Dale Fisher, FSO, was killed on September 5, near Addis Ababa, in the crash of an Ethiopian Air Lines plane. Mr. Fisher entered the Foreign Service in 1946 and served at The Hague, Prague, Paris, and Florence. At the time of his death he was First Secretary and Economic Officer at Addis Ababa.
GREGORY. Kevin John Gregory, son of FSO and Mrs. John M. Gregory, Jr., died July 20, in Japan. Interment was at
Arlington National Cemetery.
LEHRS. John A. Lehrs, FSSO-retired. died August 7. in Basel, Switzerland. Mr. Lehrs entered the Foreign Service in 1918. He served at Moscow, Copenhagen, Riga, and Basel where he was Consul at the time of his retirement in 1958.
MCKINNON. Robert A. McKinnon, FSO, died in an Army hospital at Frankfurt, Germany, on September 8. Mr. Mc¬ Kinnon entered the Department in 1948 and the Foreign Service in 1949. His posts were Cebu, Dar-es-Salaam. Brussels, and Ouagadougou, Upper Volta, where he was Deputy Chief of Mission at the time of his death.
MILLER. David Hunter Miller died on July 25, at his home in Washington at the age of eighty-six. Mr. Miller helped draft the Covenant of the League of Nations after World War I, and held several positions with the Department, in¬ cluding “editor of treaties” from 1929 until his retirement in 1948.
MOORHEAD. Maxwell K. Moorhead, FSO-retired, died July 7, at Warrenton, Va. Mr. Moorhead entered the Foreign Service in 1905 and retired in 1937 as Consul General at Istanbul.
SMITH. General Walter Bedell Smith died of a heart attack August 9, at Washington. Following a distinguished military career, General Smith had an equally distinguished career first as Ambassador to Russia from 1946 to 1949 and then as Under Secretary of State in 1953 and 1954.
TYSON. Mrs. Elizabeth Gerard Merchant Tyson, daughter of Ambassador to Canada and Mrs. Livingston T. Merchant, died on September 8, in Washington, after a long illness. Mrs. Tyson is survived by her husband, William Tyson, and four children.
WRIGHT. William P. Wright, FSO-retired, died on August 27, at Asheville, North Carolina. Mr. Wright entered the Foreign Service in 1939 and served at Johannesburg, Caracas and Canton. Prior to entering the Service Mr. Wright was with the Department of Commerce from 1925 to 1939. He retired in 1949.
Selection Boards Convene The Fifteenth Selection Boards convened on September 6.
to review the records of Foreign Service Officers, for promo¬ tion and selection out.
Board A (For Class 1)
FSO Members
HONORABLE JOHN M. CABOT, Chairman FSO-Career Minister, recently Ambassador to Brazil.
HONORABLE JACOB D. BEAM
FSO-Career Minister, Ambassador to Poland. HONORABLE OIJTERBRIDCE HORSEY
FSO-Career Minister, Deputy Chief of Mission, Rome.
Continued on p. S
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Agents and Offices in All Principal Cities
HONORABLE J. WESLEY JONES
FSO-Career Minister, Ambassador to Libya. Public Member BENJAMIN C. ESSIG
Member of Executive Committee and Board of Directors, Gardner-Denver Company, Denver, Colo.
Observer
GEORGE T. BROWN
Deputy Director, Bureau of Labor Standards, Department of Labor
Board B (For Class 2)
FSO Members HONORABLE HOMER M. BYINGTON, JR., Chairman
FSO-Career Minister, recently Ambassador to Malaya. BYRON E. BLANKINSHIP
FSO-1 Political Adviser, POLAD/HICOM, Naha SAMUEL D. BOYKIN
FSO-1, Consul General, Capetown. RICHARD S. MCCAFFERY
FSR-1, ICA Representative and Counselor for International Cooperation, Rangoon.
Public Member DR. LOWRY NELSON
Professor, Institute of Agriculture, University of Minne¬ sota, St. Paul.
Observers D'ARCY M. GEORGE
Economist, Office of Regional Economics, Bureau of Inter¬ national Programs, Department of Commerce.
FOREST L. MILLER
Assistant Director in Charge of Unemployment Insurance, Bureau of Employment Security, Department of Labor.
Board C (For Class 3)
FSO Members RALPH HILTON, Chairman
FSO-1, Special Assistant, Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs.
JEREMIAH J. O’CONNOR
FSO-1, Special Assistant, Bureau of Intelligence and Re¬ search.
FRANK P. BUTLER
FSO-2, Chief, Commercial Policy and Treaties Division, Bureau of Economic Affairs.
JAMES W. PRATT
FSO-2, Foreign Service Inspector. Public Member PAUL A. NAGEL
President. National Postal Transport Association. Wash¬ ington, D. C.
Observers CHARLES R. HERSUM
Director, Industry Advisory Committee Staff and Executive Reserve Coordinator, Department of Commerce.
JAMES H. HOOVER
Area Specialist for the Far East, Bureau of International Labor Affairs, Department of Labor.
Board D (For Class 4)
FSO Members RANDOLPH A. KIDDER, Chairman
FSO-1, Counselor for Political Affairs, Paris. H. GERALD SMITH
FSO-1, Counselor for Economic Affairs, Mexico City. LOUIS F. BLANCHARD
FSO-2, Deputy Chief of Mission, Managua. ROBERT S. FOLSOM
FSO-2, Consul General, Thessaloniki. Public Member ANDREW A. PETTIS
Vice President of Industrial Union of Marine and Ship¬ building Workers of America, Washington, D. C.
8
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A SPECIAL WASHINGTON REPRESENTATIVE FOR FOREIGN SERVICE AND OTHER GOVERNMENT PERSONNEL
Mr. Reginald P. Mitchell Foreign Service Officer, Retired 1004 National Press Bldg. Washington 4, D. C. • NA 8-4457
INTERNATIONAL SEA VAN, INC. SUBSIDIARY OF ATLAS VAN-LINES, INC.
WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE MOVING SERVICE WORLD HEADQUARTERS: EVANSVILLE, INDIANA
FAR EAST — Yokohama, Japan
EUROPE — Lausanne, Switzerland
Observers G. HAROLD KEATLEY
Supervisory Foreign Service Operations Officer, Bureau of International Business Operations, Department of Com¬ merce.
JOHN E. MEANS
International Relations Officer, Bureau of Internationa] Labor Affairs, Department of Labor.
Board E (For Class 5)
DONALD W. SMITH, Chairman FSO-1, Counselor and Supervisory Consul General, London.
ROBERT ROSSOW, JR.
FSO-2, Recently Counselor for Political Affairs, Kabul. WALTER M. BASTIAN, JR.
FSR-3, Chief, Cultural Operations Division, United States Information Agency.
ASA L. EVANS
FSO-3, Foreign Service Inspector
Public Member LLOYD H. ELLIS
Estate Manager, Denver, Colorado.
Observers FREDERICK M. BERNFIELD
Commodity Industry Economist, Business and Defense Service Administration, Department of Commerce.
LESTER N. TRACHTMAN
Assistant African Area Specialist, Bureau of International Labor Affairs, Department of Labor.
Board F (For Class 6)
LEON L. COWLES, Chairman FSO-1, Deputy Chief of Mission, Ankara.
TREVANION H. E. NESBITT
FSO-2, Economic Officer, Beirut. OSCAR C. HOLDER
FSO-3, Assistant Regional Coordinator, Office of Deputy Coordinator for Foreign Assistance.
CONSTANCE ROACH
FSO-3, Political Officer, Paris (USRO).
Public Member CHARLES D. LEWIS
President. American Sumatra Tobacco Corporation, New York, N. Y.
Observers MILTON P. ANDERSON
Commodity Industry Analyst, Bureau of International Pro¬ grams, Department of Commerce.
WILFRED BRUNNER
Chief of Leaders’ Branch, Bureau of International Labor Affairs, Department of Labor.
Board G (For Classes 7 and 8)
A. GUY HOPE, Chairman FSO-2, Director, Office of Near Eastern, South Asian Re¬ gional Affairs.
HENRY C. REED
FSO-2, Deputy Director, Office of Inter-American Regional Political Affairs.
ROBERT C. BREWSTER
FSO-3, Foreign Service Inspector. RUFUS Z. SMITH
FSO-3, Counselor for Political Affairs, Ottawa.
Public Member WILLIAM H. FICY
Owner of Insurance Agency at Denver, Colorado. Observer
ELDON W. WINGERD
Business Specialist, Office of Export Control, Department of Commerce.
12
ENROLLMENT IS UNDER WAY!!
THE NEW OFFICIAL DISABILITY INSURANCE PROGRAM
OF THE AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE ASSOCIATION IS
NOW BEING ENROLLED
THE RESPONSE TO THE GENERAL MAILING HAS BEEN EXCELLENT AND
MANY APPLICATIONS HAVE ALREADY BEEN RECEIVED.
HAVE YOU SENT IN YOUR APPLICATION? REMEMBER
IT PAYS LONGER!
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ALL PLANS COVER ACCIDENTS AND SICKNESS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD.
UNDERWRITTEN BY
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HOME OFFICE—OMAHA, NEBRASKA
For additional information contact your American Foreign Service Association Headquarters or the
office of the Administrator—Joseph E. Jones, 102-Ring Building, Washington 6, D. C.
13
October, 1936
LONDON
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BEAM'S PIN BOTTLE Rare bottling of Kentucky Straight bourbon 8 or 10 years old. (86.8 proof) with built-in pouter.
In the world of 1795, Jacob Beam traveled to Kentucky
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the Beam Family continue to make Beam Bourbon under
the same formula with the same purpose—The World’s Finest Bourbon. That is why only Beam tastes like
Beam; only Beam tastes so good. (Jim Beam 86 Proof)
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ears ago
by JAMES B. STEWART
Diplomacy and Letters
AUGUSTUS E. INGRAM, Consul General-Retired and one- Ltime editor of the JOURNAL, stated in an article in the
October 1936 JOURNAL that careers in diplomacy and letters have often gone hand-in-hand and that the United States, like other countries, has often called upon its literary men to represent their country abroad.
Gus mentioned first the careers of Benjamin Franklin, John Quincy Adams and Joel Barlow and then proceeded to name some of the literary Americans who fdled certain diplomatic and consular posts: Madrid: Washington Irving, James Russell Lowell, Claude G. Bowers. London: Edward Everett, George Bancroft, John Hay, Walter Hines Page. Germany: Bayard Taylor. Turkey: General Lew Wallace. Italy: Thomas Nelson Page, Richard Washburn Child. Denmark: Norman Hapgood. Netherlands: Henry Van Dyke. Belgium: Brand Whitlock. Paraguay: Meredith Nicholson. Some of those at consular posts were: Venice: Donald G. Mitchell I Ik Marvel). William Dean Howells. Glasgow: Bret Harte. Liverpool: Nathaniel Hawthorne. Lyons: James Fenimore Cooper. Tunis: John Howard Payne, author of "Home, Sweet Home.”
When the American Consul at Bristol notified his col¬ leagues in England that he had been victimized by an American applying for relief, Bret Harte replied:
I’m acquainted with affliction, chiefly in the form of fiction, that is offered up by strangers at the Consul’s open door,
And / know all kinds of sorrow, that relief would try to borrow, with various sums from sixpence upwards to “a penny more.”
And I think I know all fancy styles of active mendicancy, from the helpless Irish soldier who mixed in our country's war,
And who laid in Libby prison in a tear that ivasn’t his’n, and / sent back to the country that he never saw before.
I know the wretched seaman, who was tortured by a demon captain, ’till he fled in terror, with his wages in arrear;
And I’ve given him sufficient to ship as an efficient and active malefactor with a gentle privateer.
Oh / know the wealthy tourist, who (through accident the purest) lost his letters, watch, and purse from the “cold deck”
And I heeded that preamble, and lent him enough to gamble, till he won back all his money on a “cold deck” here ashore.
But I never, never, never, in beneficent endeavor, jell into the meshes—wicked meshes—by the Saxon Fowler spread;
And it seems to me a pistol, used judiciously at Bristol, would have not too prematurely brought this matter to a head.
The Foreign Service in Action
Meeting An Emergency: “Before the week is out American authorities in Spain will have completed the extremely diffi-
14
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( Continued )
State Dept, and Foreign Service
Personnel Enjoy the Convenience of
Nearby Banking At McLach/en’s Modern
POTOMAC PLAZA BRANCH
with the time-saving
DRIVE-IN WINDOW
Just a short walk up Virginia Avenue from the new State Dept. Building, McLachlen’s up-to-date banking facilities are ideally located for “lunch hour’’ banking. If you’re driving, the drive-in banking win¬ dow is easier than stopping for gas. Your account at McLachlen is equally available at every location.
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25 Years Ago cult and nerve-racking task of evacuating American refugees from that war-torn land. . .
“The occasion should not pass without a tribute to the truly splendid work done for their endangered fellow-citizens by American Foreign Service officials. . .
“With courage, resourcefulness and skill, members of the American Embassy at Madrid and American consular offi¬ cials throughout the country, set about rounding up the stranded, providing shelter for them until means of egress from Spain had been made available, and seeing that they got away safely. As a group they have lived up to the highest standards of our Foreign Service and have per¬ formed a task of which all Americans may justly be proud.
“Particular praise is due Eric C. Wendelin, third secretary of our Embassy at Madrid. With the Ambassador and next ranking officials away, youthful Mr. Wendelin automatically assumed charge and has for two months skillfully sur¬ mounted all the enormously difficult emergency tasks which have fallen to him.”—The Washington POST.
Nielsen-Morgan. Orsen N. Nielsen and Miss Esther Lynette Morgan were married at Warsaw September 2, 1936. Mr. Niel¬
sen is first secretary at Warsaw. • The marriage of Miss Clara Cecelia Goddard, daughter of Consul General and Mrs. James B. Stewart, to Dr. Stephen Lawrence Kallay took place in Budapest, September 12, 1936. Comment, 1961: The Kallays live in Denver where Dr. Kallay is practicing medicine. There are two sons. Steve is in the army overseas and Jim is on submarine duty.
And More Recently Cheers: Charles C. Eberhardt, a career officer who retired as U.S. Minister to Costa Rica in 1933, celebrated his 90th birthday on July 27 with relatives in his old home town of Salina, Kansas.
Mr. Eberhardt travelled the globe inspecting American Consulates longer than anybody. He still loves to travel, but in the good old U.S.A.
Mile High Briefing A REGIONAL briefing conference on foreign policy was held in San Francisco on July 20, and in Denver on
July 21. From the Department there were: Messrs. Tubby, Labouisse, Coerr, Mrs. Louchheim, and three officers I had not seen for thirty years i.e. Chip Bohlen, Tim Timber- lake and Walter McConaughy. When we last met, I was in charge of the Foreign Service Officer’s Training School and they were neophytes. It was exciting meeting them here in the Mile High City and it was good to see that time had been good to each one of them. As someone said: “They have been all over the lot, having played every posi¬ tion, and are still in there pitching.”
16 Meeting at the regional briefing conference: 1. to r. Walter McConaughy, Charles E. Bohlen, Janies B. Stewart, Clare II. Tiinberlake.—^
Gen. Forrest recalls how he "got thar fust with the most”
Explaining a campaign, Forrest coined this famous phrase in a reminiscent evening with Gen. Morgan and Basil Duke.
Before parting, a toast with Old Crow would be in order. Duke esteemed this bourbon “the most
famous in Kentucky” and Morgan called it “as good as ever went down your throat.”
Taste the Greatness of
OLD CROW
'*NTUCKY STTlAld^ j tt*>UAtlON WHI8*cE’ I
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America’s contribution to the liquors of the world. And leading
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preference is 126-year old Old Crow. For sheer perfection, try it.
THE
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17
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18
ersona grata
When a Roman citizen achieved a certain standing
in the community he was known among his friends
as persona grata. The Latin phrase appears in writ¬
ing today when we refer to “a most acceptable
person”. El This quality of enthusiastic acceptance
has long been recognized by those who drink
Seagram’s V.O. Canadian Whisky. Wherever V.O.
is sold (in over ioo countries throughout the world)
people of discerning taste readily note its true
lightness of tone and its rare brilliance of taste. D May we suggest that you try this world-renowned
whisky soon? At large, formal gatherings or at
meetings as intimate
as yourself and one
other Seagram’s V.O. is
always persona grata.
A CANADIAN ACHIEVEMENT - HONOURED THE WORLD OVER
An Historian's View:
Foreign policy derives its strength and character from the vitality of the national community behind it. IVe are effective in leading the world today only as we are effec¬ tive in leading ourselves.
Foreign Policy and National Morality by ARTHUR M. SCHLESINGER. JR.
THE ALL-TOO-FAMILIAR question of the relationship be¬ tween foreign policy and domestic policy is worth con¬
sidering again only because so much of the current talk about this relationship seems superficial, misleading and ultimately harmful. Thus, when white Americans were mobbing their Negro fellow citizens a little while ago in Alabama, we heard these events deplored on the ground that they made bad “propaganda” for the United States in the parts of the world controlled by colored peoples. While this was no doubt true, it suggested that the only reason why we think we should give Negroes a lair break in the l nited States is because, if we don’t we will “lose Africa.” This is obviously a poor secondary argument for doing something which should be done for its own sake. We owe it to our¬ selves, not to Africa, to live up to our own professed stand¬ ards of freedom and of opportunity.
1 would suggest that we must consider the relationship between foreign policy and domestic policy in a wider framework than simply the question whether our perform¬ ance at home creates good or bad “propaganda” abroad. When we do so, 1 think we will conclude that the political and moral force—the very penetrative power—of our for¬ eign policy derives from the political and moral vitality of the national community, and that the test of this vitality lies in the character of our policies at home. When, for example, have American leaders had impact on the world in this century? Three names spring to mind: Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow' Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt. If one asks why these men exerted particular influence, why their words moved the minds and hearts of people in other lands while the words of other American Presidents fell on deaf ears, one is forced, I believe, to seek the answer in the back¬ ground of national achievement which charged their words with meaning.
All three of these men had world impact because, in the w'orld’s view, their efforts at home had earned them the right
to speak of freedom and of justice and of opportunity
abroad. In other words, their professions before mankind,
the abstractions to which they harnessed American foreign
policy, were demonstrably more than abstractions. These
professions expressed the visible realities of their domestic- performance. What these men had done already in the way
of fighting for human progress at home proved that they
Mr. Schlesinger, who is a professor of American history at Harvard University, is currently on leave to serve as Special Assistant to President Kennedy. He is the author of “The Age of Jackson,” which won the Pulitzer Prize, and of a work in progress, “The Age of Roosevelt,” three volumes of which have been published.
meant business when they invoked noble moral and social generalities in their dealings with the world. Their words, in short, were not advertising slogans; they were symbols of concrete performance.
It was this that gave these words power and meant that no one dismissed them as empty rhetoric. It was Woodrow Wilson’s New- Freedom which both produced and validated his Fourteen Points; it was Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal which produced and validated his Four Freedoms. Not only was the creativity of these administrations abroad an exten¬ sion of their creativity at home, but their creativity at home made people abroad accept their ideals not as cy nical ges¬ tures but as national commitments.
To put the point even more simply, we must never forget that in an open society it is what we are that counts. It is what we are that substantiates or refutes what we say. We can better understand the limits of “propaganda” in this perspective. There has developed in our country in recent years a belief in public relations as a form of sorcery —a belief that, with the proper techniques and the proper gim¬ micks and the proper manipulation of “images” we can make something out of nothing—that propaganda can be¬ come almost a substitute for policy. This is a belief suitable for a nation of hucksters but hardly for a nation which aspires to the moral leadership of free peoples. Nothing surely is more illusory than the notion that words by them¬ selves can miraculously transform the American “image” before mankind. The cruel fact is that no amount of Madi¬ son Avenue magic can ever persuade the world that wre are different from what we are. The effective “propaganda” of an open society derives not from what we say but from what we do.
DESPITE the hucksters, it is what is in the package that really counts, not what it says on the label. If we really
care about our “image” before the world, the best way to im¬ prove that “image” is, not to blame all our troubles on USIA, but to give USIA better material with which to work. We simply w ill not persuade humanity that we believe deeply in equality against the backdrop of Montgomery and Birming¬ ham. New Orleans and Little Rock, any more than we could persuade humanity that we believed deeply in freedom in the high noon of Senator McCarthy. If we are serious in the de¬ sire to stand better in the world, we can well begin by acting better in our own communities. An essential first step might be to banish the huckster words from our vocabulary and shift our attention from “image” to reality. The regenera¬ tion of our political warfare rests primarily on a visible
This article is hascil on Mr. Schlesinger’s talk before AFSA’s luncheon meeting last sprim*.
20
determination on our own part to live up to great standards as a great nation.
Sometimes the actualities in our own land are worse than our representation of them. In this case, since ours is an open society, all our “propaganda” does is to lose us credi¬ bility. Sometimes the actualities are better than our repre¬ sentation of them. In this case we do ourselves and our prospects unnecessary injustice.
For example, for some years our official line has been to present the United States as the peculiar citadel of “unfet¬ tered private enterprise.” We have suggested to the world that the best way to insure economic growth is to throw off all forms of government intervention in the economy. We have acted as if our own economic life was the purest model of Manchester laissez-faire. Yet the fact is, of course, that we do not have a pure laissez-faire system in this country-— and we never did.
EVEN WHEN we were an underdeveloped nation teetering on the edge of what Walt Rostow has taught us to call
economic take-off, our economy was not obsessed with ideas of laissez-faire. Insofar as people thought about economics at all, the prevalent doctrine was pervaded with the theory of mercantilism, according to which the state was expected to take a leading role in guiding and stimulating economic growth. Hamilton was a distinguished exemplar of this view on the national scene. When one asks where capital for American economic growth came from in this period, one finds that a good deal was from public sources (and much of the rest from abroad). In the years before the Civil War, for example, half the southern railway system was built with public capital. In this period state governments bought into, owned and in some cases even operated a good deal of the business enterprise in such states as Virginia, Penn¬ sylvania and New Jersey. Historical research has long since exploded the myth that our past was one of immaculate laissez-faire.
The period when the laissez-faire model began to predomi¬ nate was after take-off—in the years following the Civil War. And even in the period w'hen laissez-faire became our official creed, we have, especially since the times of Theodore Roose¬ velt, steadily expanded the role of government in our eco¬ nomic life. We have had to do so in order to establish the bases of economic opportunity, to insure the conditions for economic growth and to safeguard our economy against periodic depression. We have done all this while clinging stubbornly to the ideology of “free enterprise.” The conse¬ quence is the contemporary irony that, while India styles itself a socialist nation and the United States styles itself a capitalist nation, our economy has in important respects a larger measure of public intervention and control than the
economy of India. If we take as the measure of planning the proportion of current resources—gross national product —disposed of by the state, about 20 percent of the Ameri¬ can economy is planned as against 13-11 percent of the Indian.
In short, we simply do not have a classical free enterprise system except in the fantasies of those who prefer myth to fact. What we have in the United States is a mixed economy with government guarantees of basic minima of life and labor and welfare and with government commitment to the maintenance of a high level of economic activity. This is our American actuality. It is absurd enough to hide this actuality; it is even more absurd when the actuality is far more impressive to the rest of the world than our cherished screen of cliches about “unfettered free enterprise. ’ Why have we tried to pretend to the world that our economic practice is far more inflexible, far more doctrinaire, far less relevant to the economic problems others encounter, than in fact it is? This pretense may gratify our own economic mythologists. But it does us great harm, and nowhere more than in the parts of the world aspiring to the same economic development through which we went ourselves a century and more ago.
The emergent nations are undergoing—in inconceivably more difficult circumstances — the experiences we went through in the first half century of our own national inde¬ pendence. They are not going to confide this process to un¬ controlled laissez-faire any more than wre did. Our doctri¬ naire passion to deny the facts of our own experience has separated us from them. And the pressure in recent years of a conservative administration in Washington has widened this gap. Men who had fought the mild and innocuous re¬ forms of the New and Fair Deals as dangerous and revolu¬ tionary could not easily achieve emotional or intellectual contact with the savage urgencies behind the contemporary revolution of the underdeveloped world—a revolution against accumulated centuries of stagnation and oppression and want. We may refurbish the rhetoric of ’76 all we wish: but it will convince no one of our sympathy with change in the w'orld if we meanwhile dedicate ourselves to resisting change in our own land.
IN A WORLD of change, our foreign policy will be effective only as it expresses an America which shows that it un¬
derstands the imperatives of change. And this suggests again that foreign policy has meaning only as an extension, a projection, of what we are at home.
This proposition may throw some light on the vexed question of the relationship between morality and foreign policy. For some recent American statesmen, the “moral”
■. w- * -SUfi
1 i^r**^* ■ ■■■
At the head table when Mr. Schlesinger addressed members of the American Foreign Service Association, (1. to r.) : Robert Newbegin, Tyler Thompson, Gerald A. Drew, Allen Dulles, Donald R. Heath. U. Alexis Johnson, William L. Blue, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., Charles E. Bohlen, Roy R. Rubottom, Jr.,
Walter P. McConaughy, Thomas S. Estes.
NATIONAL MORALITY
element in foreign policy has consisted of the application to the world of a body of abstract dicta, a process to be accompanied by appropriate sermons to others and con¬ gratulations to ourselves. The underlying assumption is that we are the custodians of the correct rules of interna¬ tional behavior, and that the function of United States for¬ eign policy is to mark other peoples up and down, accord¬ ing to how well they observe these rules.
This moralism, which has characterized so much of our foreign policy utterance in the last decade, has been mord- antly criticized by Ambassador Kennan, by Walter Lipp- mann, by Hans Morgenthau and others. It is founded on a basic fallacy—a fallacy which is perfectly plain to us when employed by other nations against us. Any state which makes a practice of telling other states that their policy is motivated by low considerations of national interest while its own is motivated by noble moral considerations of uni¬ versal import risks leaving its audience cold. We know this when other countries in their dealings with us seek to dis¬ guise national interest under a cloak of moral universalism. W hy do we suppose that other countries will not find us equally repellent when we don that cloak ourselves?
THE IMPRESSION we have given in the last decade has too often been that of laying down the moral law from our
seat of judgment to weak and erring brethren. Preaching to the world no doubt does wonders for our inner sense of self-righteousness. But foreign policy is not a matter of ventilating our interior emotions. Foreign policy is a matter of producing hard results in a hard world. The conviction that foreign policy is a lesser branch of preaching becomes particularly stupid if a gap exists between our professions and our performance. When our foreign policy invokes principles on which we do not act at home, our diplomacy becomes the diplomacy of Pecksniff.
When I join the condemnation of moralism in the conduct of foreign affairs, I do not mean to suggest that moral values have no legitimate role in foreign policy. They have such a role, and it is indispensable to a mature foreign policy to understand what that role is. The role of moral values in foreign policy consists not in what we preach to others but in what we preach to ourselves. The moral issue, in my judgment, is the content that each nation puts into its own conception of its national interest; and this content is basic¬ ally a matter of keeping faith with a nation’s own values and traditions. Morality in foreign policy, in short, consists not in applying one’s standards to other nations but in living up to them oneself. If “moralism” is the application of the national energy to faulting others, true morality is the application of the national energy to improving ourselves. It is no accident that the statesman in our time who practiced “moralism” most consistently and ruthlessly in international discourse was regarded with mistrust by our allies through¬ out the world; while someone like Ambassador Kennan. who has denied that moral standards apply in any conventional sense to international relations, has none the less conveyed to friends and foe alike a sense of authentic and searching morality in his utterances.
Our forefathers took care to abstain from self-righteous¬ ness. No one should forget the wisdom of the Sixty-Third Federalist:
An attention *o the inclement of other nations is important to every government for two reasons: the one is, that inde¬ pendently of the merits of any particular plan or measure, it
is desirable, on various accounts, that it should appear to other nations as the offspring of a wise and honourable policy; the second is that in doubtful cases, particularly where the national councils may be warped by some strong passion or momentary interest, the presumed or known opin¬ ion of the impartial world may be the best guide that can be followed. What has not America lost by her want of charac¬ ter with foreign nations; and, how many errors and follies would she not have avoided, if the justice and propriety of her measures had, in every instance, been previously tried by the light in which they would probably appear to the unbiased part of mankind?
Moral language is something the prudent statesman han¬ dles with considerable wariness. And when he does talk in moral terms, he must be sure that a record of national per¬ formance entitles him to do so, that his words are not undermined by his country’s deeds.
This places the responsibility where it must ultimately rest in a democratic society, on the people themselves. A people cannot expect the world to believe in its alleged passion for human dignity if they remain inert about human indignities in their area of direct responsibility. As Kennan once said. “Any message we may try to bring to others will be effective only if it is in accord with what we are to our¬ selves, and if this is something sufficiently impressive to compel the respect and confidence of a world, which, de¬ spite all its material difficulties, is still more ready to recog¬ nize and respect spiritual distinction than material opu¬ lence.”
It is the achievement of this state of national character that should be the first outlet for our moral impulses in foreign affairs; not the reading of sermons to the rest of the world. I would not suggest, of course, that we must await perfection at home before tackling the urgent problems which assail us every day in the world.
BUT I DO BELIEVE that our long-run effectiveness in for¬ eign affairs will depend on an energy and purpose
springing from our national community. That is why it seems to me that President Kennedy’s effort to bring about a national revival within the United States is so vital to our efforts abroad. The New Frontier, as it succeeds in bring¬ ing about the moral and social revitalization of America, is laying the necessary foundations for the reconquest of leadership in the world.
What happens in our own country , what happens in Con¬ gress, what happens in Alabama, what happens in Holly¬ wood, what happens to the state of our economy, what hap¬ pens to the condition of our culture—these things create the impression the world has of the l nited States. If it is a bad impression, it will still be too vivid a one for even Ed Murrow, with all his genius, to override. If it is a good impression, all the notorious ingenuity of the Communists will not erase it. It is the quality of our own life in the United States which will enable us to win—or compel us to lose—the leadership of the free peoples.
Foreign policy in a free society, in short, derives its quality, its energy and its purpose from the nation and the people behind it. America will be effective in a world domi¬ nated by change and revolution only if our own energies are progressive and strong, uncommitted to the past and unafraid of the future. This, 1 take it, is the message of the New Frontier in foreign affairs. And these are the terms, in my judgment, in which our nation is mostly likely to make its essential contribution to the struggle for freedom.
22
Analytical Techniques
The relevance — and limitations — of decision theory, operations research, and mathematical models for diplomacy.
“Combat de Cavaliers’’ fl ou plain
by HARRY H. BEI,L
Introductory TSote:
Our reader? will recall last year’s extended and spirited controversv between Dr. Oskar Morgenstern (“Brass Hats and Striped Pants,” July 1960 and “Decision Theory and the Department,” December 1960) and the Service on the applicability of the von Neumann-Morgenstern theory of games of strategy to the formulation and execution of for¬ eign policy. But while many of us were willing to let the dust of this controversy settle in the letters column or on the editorial page, FSO Harry H. Bell spent his year at the Air University getting to the bottom of things, mathematical practitioner of foreign affairs need not be
The result is a truly impressive thesis, “Modern Analytical Techniques and Foreign Policy Problems,” which has won the approbation of three leading exponents and practitioners of game theon : Dr. Morgenstern himself. Herman Kahn of the RAND Corporation, and Dr. T. C. Schelling of Harvard. We print the concluding chapter of this thesis below in the hope that it will stimulate wide reading of the entire study (copies are available at the Foreign Service Institute and in the Department's Library) and influence the curricula of the FSI and Senior Seminar. For, though game theory has limited applicability to decision-making in foreign affairs, its concepts and vocabulary are important to a full under¬ standing of much of the more valuable literature being produced in the field of military strategy.
Mr. Bell restricts his analysis to game theory, which is by no means the only modern analytical technique capable of contributing new insights into problems of foreign policy and social behavior. His general conclusion is that the noil- mathematical practitioner of foreign affairs need not be concerned lest he be replaced by operations researchers and computers. He finds that at most game theory “provides a convenient framework and terminology for conceptualizing decision problems and suggests certain rules (some ob-
Before his \\ ar College tour at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, FSO HARRY H. BELL served in economic assignments in Rome, Djakarta. Paris, and the Department. He is now in our Mission to the European Communities, at Brussels.
\ious, some less obvious) for deciding among alternative strategies when their payoffs are known.”
One thing that should be remembered is that game theory alone does not formulate strategy. Another is that it does not estimate payoffs or penalties at each possible combina¬ tion with the opponent’s strategies. These, as Mr. Bell points out in his study, are among the most vital areas of decision¬ making which must, therefore, in the field of foreign affairs ultimately depend on the noil-mathematical parameters of experience, knowledge of the facts, judgment, intuition, and that intangible known as professional flair or style.
Not the least valuable contribution of Mr. Bell's study is his very comprehensive bibliography on analytical methods having some applicability to foreign affairs and a recom¬ mended list of books on game theory in an ascending order of difficulty. He recommends, as do we, that the novice in the field begin with J. D. Williams’ “The Compleat Strat- egyst: Being a Primer on the Theory of Games of Strategy.” (McGraw-Hill). —Henry C. Ramsey
IT is ESTIMATED that a technological revolution in weapons systems now occurs every five years or less. These
changes not only have direct implications for our national strategy but also liave indirect effects on the less dramatic aspects of our foreign policy stance all over the world. Even allowing for some exaggeration in Professor Morgen- stern's indictment, it is a matter for concern that career diplomatic officers are said to have failed to give as much hard thought to the new problems of war and peace as their military and scientific colleagues of comparable professional levels. Deterrence, for example, is as much a diplomatic as a military question, but what has the Foreign Service had to say in refutation, amplification, or even discussion of the literature produced in this field by such Rand Corporation authors as Bernard Brodie, Charles Hitch, Herman Kahn, T. C. Schelling, or Albert Wohlstetter? Aside from Am¬ bassador Kennan, how many Foreign Service officers have
23
MODERN TECHNIQUES
had comparable intellectual impact on the thinking of high executive officials outside (or even within) their own De¬ partment?
While the recent literature of deterrence contains some of the clearest thinking available in an area in which fuzzi¬ ness can be disastrous, it has sometimes tended to err in the direction of a characteristically military over-preoccupation with pure-conflict situations. If true, this is due in part to the fact that most of this research is produced under mili¬ tary contracts or as a by-product of military research. This could also be explained in part by the theoretical framework of game theory, which sometimes predisposes toward an ultra-pessimistic assessment of the opponent’s malevolent rationality and toward the conservative minimaxingt strat¬ egy which has proved “optimal” in the two-person zero-sum. i.e. strictly competitive game.*
Yet the game theorists themselves have shown that in a thermonuclear world—as in the Prisoners’ Dilemma**— this may lead to payoffs almost as bad as the worst the enemy could do unopposed. The recent obsession with the objective of mere “survival,” the emphasis on the alleged tremendous advantage of the “first strike,” and the perva¬ sive nostalgia for what many privately believe to have been missed opportunities for “preventive war”—these are all characteristic of those who, if they could, would compress the whole world into an oversimplified two-by-two Prison¬ ers’ Dilemma matrix.f
To avoid or mitigate this danger, theory must be com¬ plemented by empirical evaluation of the psycho-social, economic, political, and just plain human parameters which are at least as important in assessing any particular coun¬ try’s probable behavior as the rationality assumptions fa¬ vored by most pure game theorists and many of the military. The experienced diplomatic officer is, or is supposed to be, particularly qualified to fill in many of these parameters, not least of which is the assessment of the threshold beyond which “the Prime Minister’s nerve will crack.”
The Foreign Service is at a disadvantage in communicat¬ ing with either the military or the operations researchers. It cannot fully share the military value-system, any more than the military can fully share the values of businessmen, labor leaders, or the clergy. It simply does not want to do its thinking in the abstract mathematical language of the new technocrats. Yet in the contemporary United States, where the military spend fifty-five percent of the Federal budget
tie, Minimizing the maximum loss. *In this type of game, one player gains exactly what the
other loses. **An important representative of 2-person non-cooperative
non-zero-sum games, in which one player does not always gain what the other loses. In the Prisoners’ Dilemma parable, both players “lose,” i.e. receive severe (although not maximum) sentences, if both act “rationally.”
fThe author earlier concluded that if thermonuclear strategy were formulated within this matrix of the Prisoners’ Dilemma, the only logical (maximally rational) course would be for each side to launch a surprise attack immediately, thereby precipitat¬ ing the thermonuclear exchange which the theory of deterrence is designed to prevent.
and ten percent of the GNP, and where private industry is increasingly oriented toward space-age ‘“systems,” it is the Foreign Service that gives the appearance of being out of touch with the times.
It is always the lot-—and to some extent the function—of the professional diplomatic officer to be slightly out of phase with the momentary fashion of opinion in his own country; but he should preferably be one-quarter cycle ahead, not half a cycle or more behind. The author suspects that there is considerable catching-up to be done in order to meet more effectively the double challenge of the military and the scientists at home (not to mention the new forms of the Soviet threat abroad!).
To remedy this situation, four rather modest suggestions are offered. (It should be observed that they do not include computerizing our foreign policy or setting it up in game matrices.)
1. Further efforts ore needed at all levels of the Depart¬ ment of State and the Foreign Service to reach a better untler- standing of contemporary military technology, organization, and attitudes.
The present cross-assignment of officers to the various service colleges is valuable and should be expanded. The country-team concept is effective at many, but not enough, foreign posts. In Washington, however, the Department and the Pentagon are both so big that close and continuing working contacts are still rare except in inter-agency com¬ mittees (where precommitment to agency positions fre¬ quently obstructs real collaboration) or in crisis situations (when it is too late).
In the right direction is the new program of detailing FSO’s to appropriate staff assignments with the military departments and taking better advantage of the reserve status of many officers. Similar details of military officers to the Department might also be feasible.J
There should also be established a regular program of political war-gaming comparable to military CPX exercises, in which FSO’s, military officers, and a few academic spe¬ cialists would participate. It will, of course, be objected that busy men can not take time off from their full in-boxes to play games, which will in any case be unrealistic. But perhaps one of the reasons in-boxes are so full is precisely because the Department and the military often work on con¬ tradictory assumptions that are not brought into confronta¬ tion soon enough. Moreover, it makes no difference if the simulated problems are unrealistic. The purpose is not to find actual solutions, but to exercise and test potential de¬ cision-makers.
2. The Department should acquire its own independent ca/nihility in advanced economic and behavioral-science theory, operations analysis, etc. and, if possible, support some basic research in these fields.
It has even been suggested—by Mr. Paul H. Nitze in I960—“that an institute similar to IDA (the Institute for Defense Analyses) but more heavily oriented toward politi¬ cal. economic, and psychological expertise be attached to the State Department but housed with IDA so that there could be continuous cross-fertilization of ideas between the
j.A start in this direction has been made.
24
by Harry H. Bell
weapons-system experts and the political experts.” Having one or more semi-autonomous research institutes
on the string is becoming a sort of status symbol among Government departments. Furthermore, whether or not such an institute solved any immediate policy problems, it could be claimed it is needed for defensive reasons in view of the present prestige of the military contract-research organiza¬ tions. It is questionable, however, whether creation of still another of these organizations is justified since, except for budgetary limitations, there is nothing to prevent expanded use of existing procedures whereby the State Department’s Division of External Research farms out research to univer¬ sities and individual scholars. Hitherto, this has involved relatively small projects, such as sections of the National Intelligence Survey, but the FY-61 program calls for a major expenditure of .$400,000 for research on disarmament and arms control and more is being requested for FY-62. Moreover, the real objection to establishing a semi-autono¬ mous research appendage of the Department similar to Rand or IDA is that it would operate in a vacuum as long as there was not a relationship of mutual confidence with the policy-making line officials. On the other hand, if such an institute did succeed in having real influence on policy formulation, there might be the contrary danger of injecting further confusion into the chain of decision.
It is more important for the Department to have an “in-house capability”—enough expertise integrated within the regular organizational structure to absorb, evaluate, and—most important—to interpret into plain English the output of contract research. If the Department properly inventoried its own resources it would probably find a number of outstanding junior officers having the requisite academic qualifications, in mathematical economics or other scientific fields, who could be encouraged to develop wider professional recognition. However, as this solution would hardly accord with the traditional career-development pol¬ icies of the Service, it might be more practical to hire out¬ side consultants of established prestige at higher cost.
3. Sooner or later, the Foreign Service will hare to take conscious steps to improve the level of mathematical prepara¬ tion of the corps as a whole.
This is not to suggest that all FSO’s can or should be mathematicians any more than they all can or should be professional linguists, historians, or members of the bar. However, some compensation for the previous neglect of the mathematical and scientific side of a liberal education is in order.
Much of this lack can be made up through recruitment, at FSO-8 level, of candidates having sound economics qual¬ ifications. Universities are now much more strict than during the 1930’s in demanding at least calculus and elemen- mentary statistics as prerequisite for economics majors and graduate students. This is also becoming true in sociology and political science.
At present many “economic officers” in the Foreign Serv¬ ice are ignorant of the basic tools of the trade: demand the¬ ory, theory of the firm, macro-economics, and the formal theory of international trade—not to mention statistics, econometrics, input-output, etc. This can be remedied with¬ in the present program of advanced university training for
mid-career officers provided these officers have already had at least the equivalent of a postwar undergraduate major in economics and provided they are required to take one of the excellent “quickie” courses in modern algebra and calculus offered for social-science students in most univer¬ sities.
It is also possible for a political or other non-economic officer having negligible mathematical background to learn the minimum amount of modern mathematics required to appreciate the basic concepts of game and decision theory, the analytical discipline most relevant for diplomacy. Actu¬ ally, this depends less on calculus than does traditional economic theory and more on mathematical logic, set theory, combinatorics, probabilities, vector and matrix algebra, and simultaneous linear equations. Minimum essentials of all these topics can be learned very painlessly from a popular freshman-level textbook by Kemeny, Snell, and Thompson, “Introduction to Finite Mathematics.” The Foreign Service Institute might consider giving such a course, which could then be followed by a course in game and decision theory sufficiently solid to permit participants to reach their own conclusions about the relevance of the formal analytical approach to political problems.
4. Finally, and despite the above recommendations, the Foreign Service should and undoubtedly will preserve a skep¬ tical sense of proportion with regard to both military doctrine and the application of analytical fads to foreign policy.
Regarding military doctrine, one should keep in mind the advice given by Lord Salisbury to the Viceroy of India in 1877 about the dire predictions of the soldiers in Simla:
No lesson seems to be so deeply inculcated by experi¬ ence of life as that you should never trust experts. If you believe doctors, nothing is wholesome; if you be¬ lieve the theologians, nothing is innocent; if you believe the soldiers nothing is safe. They all require to have their strong wine diluted by a very large admixture of insipid common sense. . . . Soldiers are dangerous ad¬ visors as to a military policy.
Similarly, game theory and other mathematical analysis when inappropriately applied are worse than no mathe¬ matics at all. To quote Professor Kindleberger (who is no opponent of mathematics in the social sciences) :
For the time being ... I prefer an intuitionist or a philosopher rather than a mathematician as Secretary of State. But not every intuitionist. I hasten to add.*
There is no imminent danger, however, of the Department of State going overboard for formal mathematical thinking. Meanwhile, a greater atvareness of what these techniques can contribute and a greater boldness in the use of mathe¬ matical models for analytical, decision, and occasionally even predictive purposes in those fields where the problems are obviously quantitative will help to indicate the limita¬ tions of the methods more clearly. This might strengthen the Department in warding off incursions by the technically sophisticated but politically naive into the formulation and execution of foreign policy, which remains, and must re¬ main, more an art than a science.
*Quoted from C. P. Kindelberger’s “Scientific International Politics,” WORLD POLITICS (October 1958).
25
p«
:
Bengali Hal W* Vaughan
26
EDITORIAL PAGE
Nose Flutes and Other Instruments of Diplomacy SOME THREE years ago Lederer and Burdick bestowed
upon an eager—or at least eagerly buying—world their dramatized answer to the perennial question, “What’s wrong with the striped pants boys?” For a while the nose llute school of diplomacy was all the rage and, indeed, some of the Lederer-Burdick points were well taken. The nose flute supporters still get a good deal of lip service from those who are looking for a simple answer to a complicated problem, but several pertinent commentators have pretty well demolished it as a panacea pattern for the conduct of our foreign relations. Notable among these is Tom Wilson, whose delightful spoof was reprinted in the August 1959 JOURNAL.
We have all heard and read more than enough about the Ugly American. We resurrect him again only to call attention to a recent comment on diplomacy which indi¬ rectly but very effectively exposes what seems to us one of the basic misconceptions of his creators. The comment occurs in a speech made by Ambassador Bohlen in Kansas City last May. We think it deserves more thought and more attention than interment in the Department of State BULLE¬
TIN is likely to produce. Mr. Bohlen said,
“Diplomacy ... is primarily the art or profession of the transaction of affairs between governments. It is, of course,
true that in the modern world our relations with any given
country involve many factors other than the direct dealings
between governments, and an effective and competent dip¬ lomat, whatever his rank, must be prepared and equipped to deal with these non-governmental aspects of his work. But, however much we recognize the importance of the public relations aspect of a diplomat’s profession, however much importance we attach to aid programs, getting in touch with the people of the country in which he is stationed —these modern developments in international relations should not cause us to forget that the chief purpose of the diplomat is the transaction of business for his country w'ith the government to which he is credited. The success or failure of a given diplomatic mission in any country will, in the last analysis, come down to the degree of success it has achieved with the government of that country. The settlement of disputes that inevitably arise between coun¬ tries, as between individuals, the ability to influence without improper interference the course of the foreign country’s action in a direction which would serve the overall objec¬ tives of our foreign policy—these are the real business of diplomacy, to which all other aspects are supporting and subsidiary.”
Tours at Hardship Posts
HOW LONG should Foreign Service Officers stay at hard¬ ship posts? It is not a new question, but it remains
an interesting one.
Among the six amendments to the Foreign Service Act of 1946 just enacted is authority to pay officers and em¬ ployees and their families at certain posts transportation costs for rest and recuperation purposes. The Department hopes through the use of this authority to make it possible for some officers to serve continuous three-year tours at hardship posts.
In this connection, it is interesting to read the testimony of Mr. H. Field Haviland, Jr., before the Senate on January 27. The hearing concerned “The Formulation and Adminis¬ tration of United States Foreign Policy,” a Brookings In¬ stitution study that Mr. Haviland directed. In his testimony, reeentlv released, he said:
I think there is a problem about [the length of foreign assignments] being too short. . . . We think two years is too short a time. There are posts that are called hardship posts. But the conditions in some of these are improving, and it is
almost impossible for a person to master his job within a period of two years. The first year he gets to know the job, and the second year he is probably getting ready to go to his next post, so that he really does not have a long enough period of effec¬ tive operation. We feel something closer to four years would be preferable.
Certain questions come to mind. Does it take a year to learn a job and another to prepare to leave? How much are conditions improving—are they still trying enough in some posts to reduce an officer’s efficiency after a compara¬ tively short period? Are there perhaps benefits that come from changing posts relatively often? And after all, are some observers over-emphasizing the newness of a new post to the experienced officer?
Among those best qualified to answer these questions are officers who are now serving or who have already served in hardship posts. Their comments would be interesting to hear, both on Mr. Haviland’s statement and on the desira¬ bility of the three-year policy being considered by the De¬ partment. The JOURNAL would welcome such comment.
27
WASHINQTON LETTER by Gwen BARROWS
“The great prohlcm here, Senator, is getting to know the people.”
September 1961
Leaves eurled up crisply and fell rattling to the earth early this year, perhaps due to the long seige of warm weather, and children in the area returned to school in tempera¬ tures that they’re given summer holi¬ days to avoid.
This was a month when: A Lights in the Capitol burned late as members of Congress tried to clear their desks preparatory to getting home to their constituents. A The fall theatre season opened brightly with “A Bit of Honey” and the town’s single theatre—serving over 1,000,000 people — reported solid bookings for the fall-winter sea¬ son. Simultaneously, repertory theatre at the Arena Stage’s build¬ ing in southwest Washington was busy rehearsing and fitting out its handsome new edifice for a late October opening.
A There was serious talk of locating a new $12,000,000 public library where it would be available to all in the heart of downtown Washington. The Central Library has done a consistently excellent job of serving its faithful public, but its current location at New York & 7th is a handicap in terms of transportation and desirable neighborhood.
A Autumn book lists of the pub¬ lishers were longer than ever as titles for Christmas buying were released.
A Cash cards, as opposed to credit cards, entitling their possessors to discounts of from 5% to 40% made their first appearance in Washington.
It w7as also a month w’hen: ♦ The area of chaos was not con¬ fined to the hurricane’s raging in Texas and Louisiana. ♦ Even long-suffering wives were objecting strenuously to the regular¬ ity of the eight-day week many hus¬ bands were working at New State. ♦ Decision-making too often took on the appearance of government by seminar. ♦ FSO’s returning from brief holi¬ days were unable to find their desks for the litter of paper that had ac¬ cumulated in their absence. ♦ Fallout and chances of survival in the event of attack were much dis¬ cussed and a variety of do-it-yourself shelters were being sold, ranging in price from $200 and up.
But there were some of the old certainties, too:
▼ College students were invited to register for FSO written examina¬ tions to be held in December. Sign of the times: starting salaries are $5,625 to $6,345. ▼ Opera will again be heard at the Lisner Auditorium this month. T Selection Board members (page 6) took up their bi-focals for the strenuous reading job that would keep them busy well into December.
Dag Hammarskjold
A cloud of gloom hung heavily over the UN and the State Depart¬ ment alike, following the news of Dag Hammarskjold’s untimely death in Africa on September 18. The United Nations’ Secretary General was one of the world’s great diplomats and an extraordinarily talented, effective civil servant. His death (and its far-reach¬ ing consequences) seemed to millions an irreparable personal loss.
“Advise and Consent’'1
There was considerable flurry round town as the filming of Allen Drury’s “Advise and Consent” got underway. Tryouts for bit parts drew thousands of Washingtonians to the Sheraton-Park early in the month, all of them eager and willing, they said, to drop work or schooling at a moment’s notice when the shooting began. The Women’s National Press Club opened its fall season with a special “inaugural” ceremony down in the Senate’s caucus room and en¬ tertained producer-directo r Otto Preminger and the cast, including
On the receiving end, in Mandalay
28
“LIFE AND LOVE IN THE FOREIGN SERVICE” by ROBERT W. RINDEN Charles Laughton (Senator Cooley), Walter Pidgeon (Senator Munson), Henry Fonda (Robert Lelfingwell- nominee for Secretary of State), Franchot Tone I the President) and George Grizzard I Van Ackerman). Assembled were more talent and more ham than had been heard in the Sen¬ ate Chambers since Will Rogers ac¬ cepted with delight the Senate’s invi¬ tation to speak and to be reported in the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. At that time, he expressed his appreciation of the honor, said he realized it was un¬ usual for an amateur to be able to compete with the professionals who had all had to start out at the bottom and work their way up, in Congress. (Something else that people may have forgotten: Will Rogers had more than 40,000,000 readers of his column at the height of his journalistic career, Bob Hope recalled recently.)
The parts of the ambassadors in this film have been assigned, we learned, to Rene Paul (French Am¬ bassador). Victor Merinow (Russian Ambassador) and Tom Helmore l British Ambassador).
Here is a film, almost documentary in character, that will be watched with enormous attention by filmgoers overseas as well as at home.
International Affairs Center Further shape was given to the
project for an International Affairs Center last month when the plans were shown to GSA, who put some draftsmen onto it. It was discovered that there was, in fact, a very con¬ venient site available for such a center near New State.
Among the facilities it is hoped the new- center can offer are:
Dining room, grill, transient bed¬ rooms, nursery, barber shop, writing room, library and reading room, lounge, large hall for dances, receptions, etc., and parking space.
As we go to press, we have just received word that Senator Humph¬ rey has introduced S. 2581 which would provide “certain facilities to promote the meetings and contacts among American governmental offi¬ cials, the Diplomatic Corps, Mem¬ bers of Congress, representatives of the international agencies,” etc.
TV and Radio Programs Last summer ABC-TV showed a
one-half hour documentary program
on life in the Foreign Service, called “Our Durable Diplomats.” It was done with taste and imagination and attracted considerable attention in its showings across the country. Two families were filmed: the Archer Bloods in Dacca, and at the contrast¬ ing post of Santiago, Chile, the Dan Alexanders.
CBS has been taping a lively new radio series, “Debriefing,” which will begin to be heard about mid-month. In “Debriefing,” returning FSO’s will be interviewed and their families w'ill be encouraged to give some of their reactions to life at their foreign post.
On the Road to Mandalay
Recently we were happy to receive a line from the American Consul at Mandalay, enclosing photos taken by his wife Desiree, of their goods and chattels being unloaded at the rail¬ way siding, (p. 28)
When asked for identification on the pix. FSO Marshall Noble wrote: “I regret to say that the only positive identification I can make is to point me out. I’m the one ivearing the white shirt outside my trousers. The photographs marked 1. and 2. were taken in the railway ‘goods yard’ at Mandalay w hen our furniture arrived. There are no forwarding agents in Mandalay and the Consulate had then no staff other than the Consul. So
down I went to bargain with the ox¬ cart drivers and to supervise (see photo number 2) the unloading. In the third photo I am leading a part of the 12-cart procession to our house in a jeep (flag flying) on loan from the Embassy. The brick wall barely visible in the background is on the inside of a moat and surrounds the location of King Thibaw’s former palace.”
Here surely is material for ABC’s next documentary film on life in this Foreign Service.
Signs of the Times: A local (mass appeal) language
school, never knowm for its interest in the esoteric, recently advertised for: “teacher candidates of Meo, Lao, Portuguese (Brazil), Burmese, Viet¬ namese, Khmer, Amharic, Somali, Swahili, Lingala.”
A Mouse in the Arras We learned from the columns of
the (London) SUNDAY TIMES recently that while William Rees-Mogg was interviewing the Chancellor a mouse had appeared out of the wainscot of his room in the Treasury.
Mr. Selwyn Lloyd, the TIMES re¬ ported, was not put out for a moment. “Show' him into the outer office at once,” he said, and returned to the discussion of the balance of pay¬ ments.
29
A Foreign Service Reminiscence
by JAMES 0. DENBY
ON MARCH 20, 1934, an enigmatic man from Mon¬ tana, the Honorable William Wallace McDowell, arrived at the Irish port of Cobh. He arrived from
the United States in the S.S. Washington, as the newly appointed American Minister to Ireland, for a tour of duty both brief and memorable. It was to be of only three weeks’ duration. At its conclusion those of us who knew' him there were plunged in gloom. We felt that a bright comet had swept across the Irish sky.
The ocean liner on which he had crossed the Atlantic rode at anchor in the outer harbor and the Port Captain’s launch ferried him ashore. A cold rain cascaded periodically down upon the docks while shining forth between those wintry moments were golden interludes of wTarm Spring sun¬ shine.
Through a film of spray on my eyeglasses I saw7 the launch churning back to land again. I was the Secretary of the American Legation in Dublin, standing with other members of a reception committee beside a markee erected for our benefit. An official of the Irish Department of Ex¬ ternal Affairs headed the committee and several officials of the local Port Authority were on it.
Anxiously, while waiting, I reviewed in my mind the meager information I had on my new chief: it was to the effect that he w7as noted for his restless energy and that thus endowed he had fought his w7ay up from humble beginnings to the top of the copper mining industry in his home state of Montana. He had likewise become prominent in Mid¬ western Democratic politics. Now, at the age of 67, a widower without children, he wras rounding off his career with a diplomatic appointment.
I viewed the situation with misgivings. In those days, Dublin was as calm and quiet as something painted on a wall. The post was one of the last remaining bastions of a vanishing mode of diplomatic life. Five or six Legations were established there, with staffs of only three or four persons each. Mr. McDowell’s colleagues had pleasant, tran¬ quil offices in which they were not always to be found. Frequently, when not entertaining or being entertained by Irish wits and scholars or by the lords and ladies of the Anglo-Irish county gentry, they were in the open air, salmon fishing, fox hunting, or horse racing. Remote from the
Mr. Denby was an active member of the Foreign Service from 1922 to 1952. He is now the director of a museum in Washington, D. C. At his farm in Virginia he raises beef cattle.
realities existing elsewhere, they had little need for ordinary business suits. They vaulted instead across that middle ground back and forth from the one extreme of casual (but very carefully selected) country clothes to the other extreme of formal attire, and it goes without saying that their wardrobes included white or beige or dove-colored spats.
Meanwhile, the Port Captain’s launch drew nearer and nearer until it flung itself against a row7 of groaning and protesting pilings at the dock side. A precarious contact was achieved and the Minister sprang onto Irish soil. With quickening pulse, 1 saw him close at hand. I saw before me a man very simple and unpretentious in appearance. Cer¬ tainly he was not, in a diplomatic sense, carefully dressed. His ready-made overcoat was of nondescript material. It was too large for him, while in almost comic con¬ trast his bowler hat was a size or more too small. On his feet were what appeared to be a miner’s heavy square-toed shoes. These obviously w7ere sartorial shortcomings but it was equally obvious that he himself was indifferent to them. His gaze, direct and penetrating, w7as focussed on me from dark eyes deeply set in a face of translucent pallor. Many lines were etched in his face, suggestive of long years of struggle as w7ell as of stubborn resistance to fatigue.
We advanced to meet the other committee members and as we did so one of them shouted: “Faille row bat abhaile.” A high hurdle, so soon in his career, had been thrown across Mr. McDowell’s path. The words meant “Welcome back to your home land,” and since he was in fact of Irish origin a reply likewise in the vernacular seemed obligatory. Stand¬ ing by his side, I endeavored in an undertone to suggest something suitable to say, but he did not hear me. He was gazing out to sea, grappling w'ith this problem in profound concentration. Embarrassment descended on the reception committee. Then he replied, in Irish of a stilted, bookish cast but of exquisite exactness. He said he w as glad at long last to set foot on the fabled, the emerald isle, glad also to be welcomed in so cordial a fashion in the language of his forebears. Broad smiles now7 wreathed the faces of the Irish members of the committee and at that high point of the reception, quite hopeful for the future, the port of Cobh was bathed in sunshine.
A special train took us to the Kingsbridge Station in Dublin from where w7e drove by motor car to the Legation located outside the city in the center of the Phoenix Park, the largest and perhaps the most charming park in Europe. The Legation also had great charm. It was a residency in
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the British 18th Century colonial style, serenely detached in those surroundings from the bustle of urban affairs. The Minister’s living quarters were on the second floor. At ground level three rooms had been set aside for the Chan¬ cery. They lay across the hall from the state dining room, the principal reception rooms, and the conservatory. Ter¬ raced lawns, a walled flower garden, and a cobblestoned stable yard encircled the building, while a greenhouse, a carriage house and box stalls and harness rooms clustered nearby. Incredulously the Minister asked: “Is this wThere we work?”
Soon I was to find out w'hat he meant by work. In a kind of frenzy he sought to get the feel of this new job of his, brooking no delays as though there might not be time enough for all he wished to accomplish. Hard on his staff, he w'as harder still upon himself, fairly tearing the heart out of the Legation’s previous correspondence, out of the State Department’s instructions, and out of the reference material I laid before him. At an early opportunity I pro¬ vided him writh a list of the official calls he should make and I suggested that it would be prolocolaire for him to make the calls in the order in which I had listed them. His eyes narrowed. What strange diplomatic subtlety w'as this, he seemed to be asking himself. What he said to me wras, "pro¬ locolaire, there’s a five dollar word if I ever heard one. I happen not to have come across it before but you may be sure I will remember it.'’
I became aware, as the busy first few days flew by, of his personal version of outdoor activity for a diplomat in Ireland. It was to walk, when time permitted, along the teeming Dublin Quays. There, in that confluence area of the country’s commerce, he would engage, for his own educa¬ tional and informational purposes, in informal colloquies with likely-looking passersby. It was the first stage of a plan he was hatching to walk through, or in, all the 32 counties of Ireland.
N THE THIRD w'eek after his arrival we came to the day of [ the dinner given in his honor by Mr. Eamon de Valera,
the President of the Executive Council. As a special courtesy, the locale chosen for this function was Dublin Castle, a newly restored and redecorated feudal stronghold frowning down upon the city from a rocky eminence on the River Liffey. In former centuries the Lords Lieutenant, the Vice¬ roys and the Justiciars of Ireland had entertained there.
Sixty guests were invited to the dinner, among whom were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Washburn Child, two friends of the Minister’s then living in Paris. Mr. Child, novelist, poet and political commentator, had earlier in his political career been Ambassador to Italy, and he was slated, after Mr. de Valera and Mr. McDowell had spoken, to be the third speaker at the dinner. Mrs. Child was Irish, an Irish beauty. Rather willful, imperious even, with red-gold hair and flash¬ ing bright blue eyes, she was a personage in her own right, neither overshadowed nor overawed by her celebrated hus¬ band.
On the day in question, at the twilight hour, I looked in on the Minister in his office. The door was open and the room wras dark. Peering from the threshold, I caught sight of him indistinctly as he sat motionless, slumped and sunken at his desk.
“Is that you, Jim?” he asked, speaking wdth difficulty and in muffled tones.
“Yes,” I replied uneasily, “it is.”
32
He brushed a handkerchief across his brow and drew him¬ self more erect in his chair. Then gropingly he turned on the light and motioned me to sit beside him. I sat on the edge of the proferred chair until, having regained his com¬ posure, he chose to speak again. “Thanks,” he said, “for checking with me but as far as I am concerned the program for tonight needs no change at this late stage.”
IT WAS RATHER an abrupt statement. I think merely for the purpose of softening it a little he added, “However,
since you are here, you may be interested to learn that Dick Child has decided on a last-minute change in his speech. As you know, he and his wife went to a concert this afternoon but it seems he did so against his will. The concert was her idea. He would have preferred to go to the races. He was not a free agent and now he wants to say in his after dinner speech that he likes freedom just as much as Irishmen do, but that he doesn’t get much of it for the simple reason that he is married to an Irish girl.”
The Minister spoke lightly, humorously, of this whim¬ sicality on Mr. Child’s part, and as I gazed into Mr. Mc¬ Dowell’s pale, lined countenance I felt the iron quality in his nature.
He became impatient with my scrutiny. “What’s the matter with us anyway?” he asked gruffly, but in a kindly manner. “Aren’t we forgetting how late it is? Let’s get ready for the party.”
At the Castle all went well at first. The Minister arrived promptly at the appointed hour to review a guard of honor drawn up in the courtyard. We entered the Castle together and in a euphoric atmosphere ascended a marble staircase curving upward to ceremonial apartments. Myriads of little candles in sconces and chandeliers glowed warmly on walls and ceilings. Distinguished-looking men and gracious ladies converged upon us. Each wanted a word with the Minister and he had a word for each of them.
In mellowing rhythm, a lavish meal unfolded, at whose conclusion Mr. de Valera, tall, slender and intense, rose to introduce his guest of honor. The Irish leader was in good form. He welcomed Mr. McDcnvell to Ireland; reviewed the happy state of Irish-American relations; and in heart-warm¬ ing fashion he mentioned as a link between the two coun¬ tries, at any rate from his personal point of view, the fact of his own birth in New York. His thoughts ranged further afield. In rising fervor, he brought within the scope of his remarks the universal human need for freedom and inde¬ pendence. These concepts he said were embedded with special firmness in Irish hearts and minds although the rightful heritage of all men everywhere.
I looked across the table at Mr. Child to see whether thoughts on the same theme were marshalling themselves in the Ambassador’s mind. Apparently they were. He was gaz¬ ing pensively up at the ceiling through half-closed eyes and a mischievous grin flickered on his lips.
Mr. de Valera brought his speech to a close and now it was Mr. McDowell’s turn. The Minister thanked Mr. de Valera and went on smoothly as follows:
“Our host,” he said, “mentioned the fact of his birth in the United States. To establish a nice balance, would that I could on my part claim to have been born in Ireland. That I cannot do, but 1 can at least state proudly that I am of Irish origin. In 1726, an ancestor of mine sailed with his young wife in the good ship Mary and Anne from Ireland to the New World and tonight you see that in my person a
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member of my family is back again. It is, I can tell you, the realization of a cherished dream. If the President of the United States had offered me a choice of all the diplomatic posts at his command it is this post of Dublin which I would have chosen.”
The Minister paused and his Irish audience looked up at him with approval.
“Many ties of family and friendship,” he continued, “link my home state of Montana with Ireland. Among our lead¬ ing citizens I revere Senator Thomas J. Walsh as Montana's greatest son. Another Irishman, Joseph Toole, holds the record for length of service as Governor of my state. In a park in Butte, Montana, there is one statue only—but I see you have guessed already—yes, you are right, it is a statue of an Irishman.”
A marked change now came over the Minister. He placed a limp hand on the table in an endeavor to arrest a perilously swaying motion of his body.
Nevertheless he continued speaking: “The statue,” he said, “was erected in honor of General Thomas Meagher. Nearby is a principal thoroughfare of Butte. It is called ‘Dublin Gulch’ . .
He could not go on. The word “Gulch,” not clearly articulated, was more of a gasping sound as he sank down below' the level of the table top. In acute heart failure, as ascertained by two doctors hastily summoned, the Minister had gone beyond human aid.
The Chief of Protocol ushered the majority of the dinner guests out of the hushed banquet hall and away from the figure on the floor into an adjoining room. I remained be¬ hind. Mr. Child stayed with me for a while, and then, in loyalty to his friend, he followed the others into the next room. He felt impelled to do so in order to make clear to them the Olympian aspect of the grim occurrence we had just witnessed. He raised an arm above his head and cried out:
“Most men seek cover at the end of their lives in a dark forest of pain and distress of mind. Bill McDowell stood in a high and shining place. He had come a long w’ay and before him, across the green fields of Ireland, stretched a panorama of further achievement. At such a time and in such a place he died instantaneously not in defeat but in victory.”
The dinner guests nodded their heads in acquiescence as they departed from the Castle.
Let me add these few more words: Funeral services were held in the Baptist Church on Harcourt Street, Mr. Mc- Dow:ell being of that faith. The little church was crowded and many persons stood outside, for he had gained a strong hold on the imaginations of the people of Dublin. Among the official tributes offered that day. the Irish flags on all the public buildings in the city were flown at half mast, the Foreign Office remained closed, and both Houses of Parliament likewise stood adjourned. Two days later a military cortege, serpentining through a melancholy' Irish mist, conveyed the Minister’s remains through the Phoenix Park from the Legation to the Kingsbridge Station, en route to the United States. Numerous thoughtful accounts appeared in the local press in that period reviewing and appraising the circumstances of his tour of duty in Ireland. “Let there be no mistake about it,” one reporter wrote, “this was, in simple truth, a grand affair entirely .
34
THE BOOKSHELF
A DOZEN years after the event, the Marshall Plan is widely rec¬
ognized as having been one of the most farsighted, historic, and success- fnl acts of American statesmanship. In this, her latest book, Barbara Ward contends that the moment has again arrived for the United States and the Vi est to make history, this time by guaranteeing the success of India’s Third Five Year Plan through a long- range aid program.
Why India? Simply because it is an important country by almost any standard and is certain to grow in im¬ portance. Its million square miles lie strategically between the Near and Far East. Its northern border flanks Communist China. If lost to a totali¬ tarian system, its 400 millions could tip the population balance decisively against the free world. Finally. India is important because it is a democracy in urgent need of help.
Miss W ard points out that despite the unparalled efforts of its Govern¬ ment, India’s economic growth has been uneven and the future of that growth remains uncertain. Significant progress has indeed been made in lay¬ ing the foundations for a self-generat¬ ing economic expansion: new steel mills, dams, railway lines and power systems have been constructed. New industries have been founded.
But the all-important agricultural sector lags, foreign debts have piled up. the new industries have yet to liquidate their high costs through in¬ creased production, some important in¬ dustrial targets have been missed, and foreign exchange reserves are all but exhausted. Inevitably, questions have begun to be asked as to whether the rapid economic growth that India has attempted is possible within a demo¬ cratic framework. This, then, as Miss Ward sees it. is the time of greatest
INDIA AND THE WEST—PATTERN FOR A COMMON POLICY, by Barbara Ward. W. W. Norton and Co., Inc. $4.50.
INDIAN ECONOMIC POLICY AND DE¬ VELOPMENT, by P. T. Bauer. Frederick A. Praeger. $4.25.
peril: when the Indian economic revolution will be completed one way or another. The West by aiding India must prove that the democratic govern¬ ment of a developing country can deliver the goods to its people. In doing so, the West will be serving its own interest as well as India’s.
But will foreign aid do the job? Not. according to Professor Bauer, if the Indian Government pursues its cur¬ rent development policy with its em¬ phasis on heavy industry and on the expansion of government ownership of industry.
In this sharply written criticism of Indian policy, an expansion of a study written originally for the American Enterprise Association, of Washington, D. C., the author contends that Indian planners are more concerned with the establishment of a socialist state than they are with economic costs, increased output, and an improved Indian stand¬ ard of living. In support of this view he quotes extensively the pronounce¬ ments of Indian leaders and economists who drafted the Plans. He notes the bias of the Second and Third Plans in favor of heavy industry which, he believes, reflects a Soviet model. He cites the growing regulation and con¬ trol of private industry and its con¬ finement to specified spheres of ac¬ tivity. Finally, he describes what he regards as the serious neglect by the planners of agricultural productivity, educational facilities, and communica¬ tions, all of which are essential ele¬ ments in economic growth.
Mere investment, Professor Bauer emphasizes, is not enough to ensure growth. This, he believes, has been a cardinal error of Indian official think¬ ing. Its direction, composition, and timing are equally important.
Anyone who wants a challenging intellectual experience should read both of these books. Each in its own way is excellent. Both are certain to make the reader appreciate the im¬ portance of judgment in the art of policy making.
—JAMES J. BLAKE
Washington
“Incisive Commentary”
THE CONSERVATIVE Radical Party of France had a remarkable history
reestablishing itself during the thir¬ teen years after World War II. FSO Francis De Tarr spent a winter diag¬ nosing the party’s history from the in¬ side, with full cooperation from its officials and leadership. His highly competent volume is the result. It is a model of political analysis and an incisive commentary on the postwar political ills of France. The Radicals were really a club of centrist politi¬ cians dedicated to the social and eco¬ nomic status quo, to the reestablish¬ ment of France as a great power, and to stabilizing the French scene through the “stomach theory” of political as¬ similation rather than rejection. It was a collection of astute professionals tending to promote moderation and compromise in government until Mendes-France splintered the party by endeavoring to shape it into a disci¬ plined instrument for political and so¬ cial reform. The author suggests that the diverse tendencies among the Radi¬ cals, which he describes in consider¬ able detail, were in many ways similar to our own contemnorary nolitical spectrum. This excellent primer on practical politics is also a liandv biog¬ raphy of the Radical leaders who man¬ aged to head half of the twenty-one governments of the last Republic. The Party and the Fourth Republic more or less expired together—for the time being.
—E. .1. BEICEL
THE FRENCH RADICAL PARTY, by Francis De Tarr. Oxford. $5.60.
A Short Guide
MR. PARTNER, a Professor of His- ory at Winchester College, has
turned out a rather brief (135 pages) but useful “guide” covering the situa¬ tion in the Arab countries up to the beginning of 1960. Country by country narratives are provided, as well as a relatively lengthy historical section on the vicissitudes of Arab nationalism both prior to and since the Ottoman Empire. The work is objective and suffers only from brevity. Given the increasing importance of the Maghreb, for example, one could wish for lengthier treatment of that area, not to mention the discussion entitled “The Entry of America.”
—WILLIAM J. PORTER
A SHORT POLITICAL GUIDE TO THE ARAB WORLD, by Peter Partner. Praeger. $4.00.
35
Washington book stores report the two top
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Agony' and the Ecstasy9" by Irving Stone and
“Tropic of Cancerby Henry Hiller. The latter
book was until recently banned from the mails.
THE BOOKSHELF (Continued)
U.S. Interests in the United Nations
As MR. EICHELBERCER tells us, “a IV world organization cannot be a comfortable club of like-minded peo¬ ple.” With imagery like this he gives a good but much simplified picture of the first fifteen years of the United Nations, more useful to J. Q. Citizen than to a well-informed FSO. Some of his pro¬ posals, such as enlargement of the Security Council and ECOSOC to afford better geographical representation of the UN’s present membership, while perhaps desirable, seem unlikely in the context of present world politics.
Dr. Bloomfield’s thoughtful and de¬ tailed study of U.S. policy interests in the UN should be read by all FSO’s, especially officers dealing with multi¬ lateral diplomacy. Dr. Bloomfield sup¬ ports Mr. Eichelberger’s contention that it would be to the U.S. interest to make greater use of the UN. In the field of national security, the UN per¬ forms a useful function in putting the lid on areas of tension and local erup¬ tions of violence. In the economic and social fields it would improve our world¬ wide position to put more aid funds in multilateral channels and to try to regain our squandered initiative in sup¬ porting human rights covenants. We should have more Americans serving in international secretariats; it is not enough to provide machinery for tempo¬ rary secondment to the UN; more im¬
portantly, we should make a tour of duty in Secretariats more appealing to our most qualified FSO’s. It is only in the area of international law that Dr. Bloomfield seems to be off base. He proposes a new protocol providing for compulsory jurisdiction of the Interna¬ tional Court of Justice in order to estab¬ lish a community of states where inter¬ national law can be applied in all dis¬ putes lending themselves to legal solu¬ tions. But the machinery is already available; it is a change in the dis¬ position of states, including the U.S., that is required, and not more pieces of paper.
Mr. Hovel’s analysis of bloc politics is rather technical, and too often stops short of drawing conclusions for action. He surveys the blocs and groups which play an increasing role in UN politics, and concludes that if properly ap¬ proached, they can contribute to the resolution of conflicting interests. Two- fifths of his study is devoted to charts on voting patterns.
—BARBARA B. BURN
UN, THE FIRST FIFTEEN YEARS, by Clark M. Eichelberger. Harper and Broth¬ ers, $2.75.
THE UNITED NATIONS AND U.S. FOREIGN POLICY, by Lincoln P. Bloom¬ field. Little, Brown and Company. $4.75.
BLOC POLITICS IN THE UNITED NATIONS, by Thomas Horn. Jr. Harvard University Press, $6.50.
Management—Here and Overseas
IT TOOK A LONG time for the Harvard Business School to convince Ameri¬
cans that management could be learned anywhere but in the school of hard knocks and by any other method than on-the-job training. By the end of World War II, however, it had achieved general acceptance and since then the idea has found enthusiastic acceptance internationally. Today governmental organizations, educational institutions, business firms, and banks are all in¬ volved in management training pro¬ grams. Many associations, foundations, and research institutes support such training programs, and professional management consultants are numerous. Furthermore, this activity is heavily in¬ volved overseas. Thousands of foreign businessmen, government officials, and students have come to this country for management training under ICA tech-
TRAINING MANAGERS ABROAD, by Jane Dustan and Barbara Makanowitzky. The Council for International Progress in Management, 2 vols. $12.50.
nical assistance programs, and hun¬ dreds of our management specialists have been sent overseas.
“Training Managers Abroad” is a two-volume reference work on this nearly universal development. It in¬ cludes chapters on the history and development of management training and analyzes the kinds of training and the trends it is following. It has de¬ tailed descriptions of the international training activities of over 450 organiza¬ tions. The preponderance of American leadership in the field is clearly shown, as is the readiness of alert business in foreign lands to take advantage of the new knowledge. At the rate that for¬ eign business in Europe and Japan is crowding us in the economic field we may be pardoned for asking whether we should have sewn the seed so gen¬ erously and effectively. Since the de¬ velopment is here to stay, everyone con¬ cerned with management training should have this reference work.
-RICHARD FYKE BOYCE
Il.R.S.
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37
1. Calcutta. Consul General Gordon H. Mattison during a re¬ cent fishing trip. Mr. Mattison had just taken this five pound Mahseer from the Ranghit river in North Bengal.
2. Woomera. Ambassador William J. Sebald (r.) is shown during a tour of the Australian satellite tracking station at Woomera; Dr. D. W. Moran (1.) is in charge of operations at the “Big Dish” station, used in tracking the U.S. Project Mer¬ cury.
3. Djakarta. Ambassador Howard P. Jones (center) inspects the progress being made on the tallest building in Indonesia, Djakarta's new 425-rooin Hotel Indonesia. Shown with the Am¬ bassador are (r.) William Land, manager, and (1.) Abel Soren¬ son, architect and designer of the hotel, who was co-designer of the UN building in New York City.
4. Recife. Consul Edward T. Walters is pointing out to Edward M. Kennedy, younger brother of the President, some of the problems of a depressed area.
3. Nassau. Consul General J. Lawrence Barnard presents trophies to the Bahamas Baseball League award winners.
6. Addis Ababa. Sgt. Paul Cook, USMC. being fed the first slice of wedding cake by his bride, the former Miss Ramona Day, FSS, Addis Ababa. Ambassador Arthur L. Richards toasts the happy couple.
7. Manila. Many Embassy, USIS and ICA personnel have been taking advantage of the foreign language study program offered at the Embassy to learn Tagalog, the language spoken by the majority of Filipinos. Last Christmas a group of the Americans presented a short skit in Tagalog, “Mano Po, Ninang . . (May I Kiss Your Hand, Godmother?). Shown participat¬ ing in the play are: (1. to r.) FSO Jorma L. Kaukonen, Lt. Angelo P. Semeraro, FSO Carl H. McMillan. Jr., FSO John F. Mcjennett, Jr. and Mrs. Mcjennett.
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WORLD AFFAIRS
A Foreign Service Reading List for 1961
I. GENERAL II. UNITED STATES III. OTHER AREAS
I. GENERAL Acheson, Dean G. Sketches from Life of Men I Have Known. New York, Harper, 1961. 206pp. $4.00 Bloom, Solomon F. Europe and America; the Western World in Modern Times. New York, llarcourt. Brace & World, 1961. 761pp. $10.75 Bozeman. Adda B. Politics and Culture in International History. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, 1960. 560pp. $10.00 Clark, Grenville, and Lotus B. Sohn. World Peace Through World Law. 2d ed., rev. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 387pp. $6.50 Conference on World Tensions, University of Chicago, 1960. The Promise of World Tensions, edited by Harlan Cleveland. New York, Macmillan, 1961. 157pp. $3.50 Feis, Herbert. Between War and Peace; the Potsdam Conference. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, 1960. 367pp. $6.50 Footman, David., ed. International Communism. Carbondale, South¬ ern Illinois University Press, 1960. 151pp. $3.75. Guevara, Ernesto. Guerrilla Warfare. Translated by J. P. Morray. New York, Monthly Review Press, 1961. 127pp. $3.50. Hayes, Carlton J. H. Nationalism: a Religion. New York, Mac¬ millan, 1960. 187pp. $5.00 Hayter, Sir William. The Diplomacy of the Great Powers. New York, Macmillan, 1961. 74pp. $2.75. Jenks, Clarence W. International Immunities. New York. Oceana Publications, 1961. 178pp. $6.00
ECONOMICS
Aubrey, Henry G. Coexistence: Economic Challenge and Response, and a Statement by the NPA Special Project Committee on the Economics of Competitive Coexistence. Washington, National Plan¬ ning Association, 1961. 323pp. $5.00 Benbam, Frederic C. Economic Aid to Underdeveloped Countries. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1961. 121pp. 12s. 6d. Black. Eugene R. The Diplomacy of Economic Development. Cam¬ bridge, Harvard University Press, I960. 74pp. $3.00 Braibanti, Ralph J. D., and Joseph J. Spengler, eds. Tradition, Values, and Socio-economic Development. Durham, N. C., Published for Duke University Commonwealth-Studies Center by Duke Uni¬ versity Press, 1961. 305pp. $6.00 Krause, Walter. Economic Development; the Underdeveloped World and American Interest. San Francisco, Wadsworth Pub. Co., 1961. 524pp. $7.50 Levin, Jonathan V. The Export Economies: Their Pattern of De¬ velopment in Historical Perspective. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 347pp. $6.75 Millikun, Max F., and Donald L. M. Blaekiner, eds. The Emerg¬ ing Nations: their Growth and United States Policy. Boston, Little, Brown, 1961. 171pp. $2.50 Nove, Alee, and Desmond Donnelly. Trade with Communist Countries. New York. Published for the Institute of Economic Affairs by Macmillan, 1961. 183pp. $6.00 Shon field, Andrew. The Attack on World Poverty. New York, Random House, 1960. 269pp. $5.00 Theobald, Robert. The Rich and the Poor; a Study of the Eco¬ nomics of Rising Expectations. New York, C. N. Potter, 1960. 196pp. $4.50
UNITED NATIONS Bailey, Sydney D. The General Assembly of the United Nations; a Study of Procedure and Practice. New York, Praeger, 1960. 337pp. $5.00 Bloomfield, Lincoln P. The United Nations and U. S. Foreign Policy; a New Look at the National Interest. Boston, Little, Brown, 1960. 276pp $4.75 Courlander, Harold. Shaping our Times; what the United Nations is and does. New York, Oceana Publications, 1960. 242pp. $3.50 Coyle, David C. The United Nations and How it Works. Rev. ed. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 222pp. $3.75 Eiehelberger, Clark M. UN: the First Fifteen Years. New York, Harper, 1960. 147pp. $2.75 Sharp, Walter R. Field Administration in the United Nations System; the Conduct of International Economic and Social Programs. New York, Praeger, 1961. 570pp. $9.50
WORLD POLITICS Beehhoefer, Bernard G. Postwar Negotiations for Arms Control. Washington, Brookings Institution, 1961. 641pp. $8.75 Brennan, Donald G., ed. Arms Control, Disarmament ,and National Security. New York, Braziller, 1961. 475pp. $6.00 Bull, Hedley. The Control of the Arms Race; Disarmament and Arms Control in the Missile Age. London, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1961. 215pp. 12s. 6d. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Perspectives on Peace, 1910-1960. New York, Praeger, 1960. 202pp. $3.00 Carter, Gwendolen M., and John II. Herz. Government and Politics in the Twentieth Century. New' York, Praeger, 1961. 218pp. $4.75 Dean, Vera M. Builders of Emerging Nations. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1961. 277pp. $5.00 Hovet, Thomas, Jr. Bloc Politics in the United Nations. Cam¬ bridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 197pp. $6.50 Kaplan, Morton A., and Nicholas de B. Katzenbacli. The Political Foundations of International Law. New York, Wiley, 1961. 372pp. $6.95 Liddell Hart, Basil II. Deterrent or Defense, a Fresh Look at the West’s Military Position. New York, Praeger, 1960. 257pp. $4.95 Lippinann, Walter. The coming Tests with Russia. Boston, Little, Brown, 1961. 37pp. $2.50 Lukas, John A. A History of the Cold War. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1961. 288pp. $3.95 McGovern, William M. Strategic Intelligence and the Shape of Tomorrow. Chicago, Regnery, 1961. 191pp. $4.00 Power, Paul F. Ghandi on World Affairs. Washington, Public Affairs Press, 1960. 128pp. $3.25 Roucek, Joseph S., ed. Contemporary Political Ideologies. New York, Philosophical Library, 1961. 470pp. $10.00 Sclielling, Thomas C., and Morton II. Halperin. Strategy and Arms Control. New York, Twentieth Century Fund, 1961. 148pp. $2.50
//. UNITED STATES
GENERAL American Assembly. The Secretary of State, Don K. Price, editor. Englewood Cliffs, N. J., Prentice-Hall, 1960. 200pp. $3.50 Childers, James S. The Nation on the Flying Trapese; the United
An annual feature prepared by the Library of the Department of State. Books published after September 30, will be included in next year’s list. 41
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States as the People of the East see Us. New York, McKay, 1960. 284pp. $4.50
Committee for Economic Development. The International Position of the Dollar; a Statement of National Policy . . . New York, 1961. 70pp. $1.00 Finer, Herman, The Presidency: Crisis and Regeneration, an Essay in Possibilities. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1960. 374pp. $5.00 Galbraith, John K. The Liberal Hour. Boston, Houghton Mifflin. 1960. 197pp. $3.50
Hickman, Bert G. Growth and Stability of the Postwar Economy. Washington, Brookings Institution, 1960. 426pp. $6.00 Hitch, Charles J., and Roland N. McKean. The Economics of Defense in the Nuclear Age. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 422pp. $9.50 llelunan, Warren F. Professional Diplomacy in the. United States, 1779-1939; a Study in Administrative History. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1961. 254pp. $6.00 Life (Chicago) The National Purpose, by John K. Jessup and others. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1960. 146pp. $2.95 Mayer, Martin. The Schools. New York, Harper, 1961. 446pp. $4.95 Morgenthau, Hans J. The Purpose of American Politics. New York, Knopf, 1960. 359pp. $4.50 New Frontiers of the Kennedy Administration; the Texts of the Task Force Reports Prepared for the President. Washington, Public Affairs Press, 1961. 170pp. $3.25 Slichter, Stunner II. Potentials of the American Economy; Selected Essays. Edited by John T. Dunlop. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1961. 467pp. $7.50 Spaulding, E. Wilder. Ambassadors Ordinary and Extraordinary. Washington, Public Affairs Press, 1961. 302pp. $5.00 Steiner, Zara S. Present Problems of the f oreign Service. Prince¬ ton, N. J., Center of International Studies, Princeton University, 1961. 57pp. $1.00 U. S. President’s Commission on National Goals. Goals for Ameri¬ cans; Program for Action in the Sixties . . . Englewood Cliffs, N. J., Prentice-Hall, 1960. 372pp. $3.50 White, Theodore II. The Making of the President, 1960. New York, Atheneum Publishers, 1961. 400pp. $6.95 Wilson, Robert R. United States Commercial Treaties and Inter¬ national Law. New Orleans, Hauser Press, 1960. 381 pp. $6.50
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Almond, Gabriel A. The American People and Foreign Policy. 2d ed. New York, Praeger, 1960. 269pp. $3.65 Elder, Robert E. The Policy Machine; the Department of State and American Foreign Policy. Syracuse, N. Y., Syracuse University Press, 1960. 238pp. $4.50 Finletter, Thomas K. Foreign Policy: the Next Phase, the 1960s. 2d ed. New York, Published for the Council on Foreign Relations by Harper, 1960. 235pp. $4.00 Foreign Policy Clearing House, Washington, D. C. Strategy for the 60’s, edited by Jay H. Cerf and Walter Pozen. New York. Praeger. 1961. 155pp. $4.00 Grattan, Clinton H. The United States and the Southwest Pacific. Cambridge, Llarvard University Press, 1961. 273pp. $5.00 Hahn, W’alter F., and John C. Neff, eds. American Strategy for the Nuclear Age. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1960, 455pp. $3.50 Haviland, Henry F., Jr., and others. The Formulation and Ad¬ ministration of United States Foreign Policy. Washington, Brookings Institution, 1960. 191pp. $1.00 Holt, Robert T., and Robert W. van de Velde. Strategic Psycho¬ logical Operations and American Foreign Policy. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1960. 243pp. $5.00 Kertesz, Stephen D., ed. American Diplomacy in a New Era. Notre Dame, Ind., University of Notre Dame Press, 1961. 601pp. $10.00 Kissinger, Henry A. The Necessity for Choice; Prospects of Ameri¬ can Foreign Policy. New York, Harper, 1961. 370pp. $5.50 Logan, John A. No Transfer; American Security Principle. New Haven, Yale University Press, 1961. 430pp. $6.75 Perkins, Dexter. The United States and Latin America. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press, 1961. 124pp. $3.00 Plisclike, Elmer. Conduct of American Diplomacy. 2d ed. Prince¬ ton. N. J.. Van Nostrand, 1961. 660pp. $8.50
42
Rockefeller Brothers Fund. Prospect for America: the Rockefeller Panel Reports. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1961. 486pp. $3.95 Spanier, John W. American Foreign Policy since World War II. New York, Praeger, 1961. 234pp. $4.50 Stillman, Edmund O., and William Pfaff. The New Politics; America and the End of the Postwar World. New York, Coward- McCann, 1961. 191pp. $4,00 Strausz-IIupc, Robert, and others. A Forward Strategy for America. New York, Harper, 1961. 451pp. $5.95 Van Alstyne, Richard W. The Rising American Empire. New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 215pp. $6.00
III. OTHER AREAS
EUROPE—EASTERN
Itarghoorn, Frederick C. The Soviet Cultural Offensive; the Role of Cultural Diplomacy in Soviet Foreign Policy. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, I960. 353pp. $7.50 Blodnieks, Adolfs. The Undefeated Nation. New York, R. Speller, 1960. 312pp. $6.00
Burks, R. V. The Dynamics of Communism in Eastern Europe. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, 1961. 244pp. $5.00 Conquest, Robert. Power and Policy in the U.S.S.R.; the Study of Soviet Dynasties. New York, St. Martin’s Press, 1961. 485pp. $7.95 Dallin, David J. Soviet Foreign Policy after Stalin. Philadelphia, Lippincotl, 1961. 543pp. $7.95 Daniels, Robert V. The Conscience of the Revolution; Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 526pp. $10.00 Evans, Stanley G. A Short History of Bulgaria. London, Lawrence & Wishart, I960. 254pp. 18s. 6d. Fitzsimmons, Thomas, and others. USSR: its People, its Society, its Culture. Newr Haven, HRAF Press, 1960. 590pp. $8.50 Gibnev, Frank. The Khrushchev Pattern. New York, Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1961. 280pp. $4.95 Grossman, Gregory, ed. Value and Plan; Economic Calculation and Organization in Eastern Europe. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1960. 370pp. $7.00 Hazard, John N. Settling Disputes in Soviet Society; the Formative Years of Legal Institutions. New York, Columbia University Press, 1960. 534pp. $9.50 Heppell, Muriel, and Frank R. Singleton. Yugoslavia. New York, Praeger, 1961. 236pp. $5.95 Jasny, Naum. Soviet Industrialization, 1928-1952. Chicago, Univer¬ sity of Chicago Press, 1961. 467pp. $10.00 Joint Committee on Slavic Studies. The Transformation of Russian Society; Aspects of Social Change since 1861, edited by Cyril E. Black. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 695pp. $9.75 Kalb, Marvin L. Dragon in the Kremlin; a Report on the Russian- Chinese Alliance. New York, Dutton, 1961. 258pp. $4.50 KatkofT, Vladimir. Soviet Economy 1940-1965. Baltimore, Dangary Pub. Co., 1961. 559pp. $6.50 Kennan, George F. Russia and the West under Lenin and Stalin. Boston, Little, Brown, 1961. 411pp. $5.75 Kovner, Milton. The Challenge of Coexistence; a Study of Soviet Economic Diplomacy. Washington. Public Affairs Press, 1961. 130pp. $3.25 Michal, Jan M. Central Planning in Czechoslovakia; Organization for Growth in a Mature Economy. Stanford, Calif., Stanford Uni¬ versity Press, 1960. 274pp. $5.75 Miller, Wright W. Russians as People. New York, Dutton, 1961. 1 205pp. $3.95 Overstreet, Harry, and Bonaro Overstreet. The War Called Peace, Khrushchev’s Communism. New York, Norton, 1961. 368pp. $4.50 Pipes, Richard, ed. The Russian Intelligentsia. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 234pp. $4.50 Pistrak, Lazar. The Grand Tactician; Khrushchev’s Rise to Power. New York. Praeger, 1961. 296pp. $6.00 Reisky-Dubnic, Vladimir. Communist Propaganda Methods; a Case Study on Czechoslovakia. New York, Praeger, 1961. 287pp. $6.00 Schwartz, Harry. The Red Phoenix; Russia since World War II. New York, Praeger, 1961. 427pp. $6.00 Seton-Watson, Hugh. From Lenin to Khrushchev, the History of World Communism. New York, Praeger, 1960. 432pp. $6.00 Ulam, Adam B. The Unfinished Revolution; an Essay on the
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Sources of Influence of Marxism and Communism. New York, Random House, 1960. 307pp. $5.00
EUROPE—WESTERN
Albrecht-Carrie, Rene. France, Europe and the two World Wars. New York, Harper, 1961. 346pp. $7.00 Benoit, Emile. Europe at Sixes and Sevens; the Common Market, the Free Trade Association, and the Elnited States. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 275pp. $5.00 Berlin—Pivot of German Destiny; translated and edited by Charles B. Robson. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1960. 233pp. $5.00 De Tarr, Francis. The French Radical Party; from Herriot to Mendes-France. London, New' York, Oxford University Press, 1961. 264pp. 35s. Dill, Marshall, Jr. Germany; a Modem History. Ann Arbor, Univer¬ sity of Michigan Press, 1961. 467pp. $8.75 Donner, Jdrn. Report from Berlin. Translated by Albin T. Ander¬ son. Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1961. 284pp. $6.50 Ebsworth, Raymond. Restoring Democracy in Germany; the British Contribution. New York, Praeger, 1961. 222pp. $6.75 Frank, Isaiah. The European Common Market; an Analysis of Commercial Policy. New' York, Praeger, 1961. 324pp. $8.50 Freedeman, Charles E. The Conseil d’Etat in Modern France. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 205pp. $5.00 Freund, Gerald. Germany between two Worlds. New York, Har- court, Brace, 1961. 296pp. $5.75 Freyinond, Jacques. The Saar Conflict, 1945-1955. London, Stevens, 1960. 395pp. 50s. Gottlieb, Manuel. The German Peace Settlement and the Berlin Crisis. New York, Paine-Whitman Publishers, 1960. 275pp. $8.50 Hermeng, Ferdinand A. The Fifth Republic. Notre Dame, Ind., University of Notre Dame Press, 1960. 90pp. $1.95 Lamartine Yates, Paul. Food, Land and Manpower in Western Europe. London, Macmillan, 1960. 249pp. 35s. Lamfalussy, Alexandre. Investment and Growth in Mature Econo¬ mies; the Case of Belgium. New York, St. Martin’s Press, 1961. 206pp. $7.50 Laponce, J. A, The Government of the Fifth Republic; French Political Parties and the Constitution. Berkeley, University of Cali¬ fornia Press, 1961. 415pp. $6.50 Mclnnis, Edgar, Richard Iliscocks, and Robert Spencer. The Shaping of Postwar Germany. New Y ork, Praeger, 1960. 195pp. $4.00 Macridis, Roy C.. and Bernard E. Brown. The De Gaulle Re¬ public: Quest for Unity. Homewood, 111., Dorsey Press. 1960. 400pp. $5.00 Matthews, Herbert L. The Yoke and the Arrows; a Report on Spain. Rev. cd. New York, Braziller, 1961. 258pp. $4.00 Mayer, Frederick V. The European Free-Trade Association; an Analysis of the “Outer Seven.” New York, Praeger, 1960. 140pp. $4.00 Neufeld, Maurice F. Italy: School for Awakening Countries; the Italian Labor Movement in its Political, Social, and Economic Setting from 1860 to 1960. Ithaca, N. Y., State School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, 1961. 589pp. $9.00 Plisehke, Elmer. Contemporary Government of Germany. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1961. 284pp. $1.95 Prittie, Terence C. F. Germany Divided; the Legacy of the Nazi Era. Boston, Little, Brown, 1960. 381pp. $6.00 Robertson, Arthur H. The Council of Europe; its Structure, Func¬ tions and Achievements. 2d ed. New York, Praeger, 1961. 288pp. $9.00 Shirer, William L. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1960. 1245pp. $10.00 Stolper, Wolfgang F. Germany between East and West. Washing¬ ton, National Planning Association, 1960. 80pp. $1.75 The Structure of the East German Economy. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 478pp. $10.00 Szaz, Xoltan M. Germany’s Eastern Frontiers; the Problem of the Oder-Neisse Line. Chicago, Regnery, 1960. 256pp. $7.50 Tannenhaum, Edward R. The New’ France. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1961. 251pp. $5.00 Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. New York, Harper, 1961. 720pp. $8.50 Werth, Alexander. The De Gaulle Revolution. London, R. Hale, 1960. 404pp. 30s. Whitaker, Arthur P. Spain and the Defense of the West; Ally and
44
Liability. New York, Published for the Council on Foreign Rela¬ tions by Harper, 1961. 408pp. $6.00 Williams, Philip M., and Martin Harrison. De Gaulle’s Republic. London, Longmans, 1960. 279pp. 25s.
THE BRITISH COMMONWEALTH OF NATIONS
Allen, Harry C. The Anglo-American Predicament; the British Commonwealth, the United States, and European Unity. New York, St. Martin’s Press, 1960. 241pp. $6.75 Duke University, Durham, N. C. Commonwealth-Studies Center. The Growth of Canadian Policies in External Affairs, by Hugh Keenley- side and others. Durham, Duke University Press, 1960. 174pp. $5.00 The Economist (London) The Commonwealth and Europe, by the Economist Intelligence Unit. London, Economist Intelligence Unit, 1960. 606pp. 42s. Gordon, Bernard K. New Zealand becomes a Pacific Power. Chi¬ cago, University of Chicago Press, 1960. 283pp. $6.50 Harrison, Martin. Trade Unions and the Labour Party since 1945. London, Allen & Unwin, 1960. 360pp. 32s. Hicks, Ursula K. Development from Below; Local Government and Finance in Developing Countries of the Commonwealth. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1961. 549pp. $5.60 Jeffries, Sir Charles J. Transfer of Power; Problems of the Pas¬ sage to Self-government. New York, Praeger, 1961. 148pp. $4.00 Kenen, Peter B. British Monetary Policy and the Balance of Pay¬ ments. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 325pp. $7.50 Meehan, Eugene J. The British Left Wing and Foreign Policy; a Study of the Influence of Ideology. New Brunswick, N. J., Rutgers University Press, 1960. 201pp. $5.00 Oliver, William H. The story of New Zealand. London, Faber and Faber. 1960. 301pp. 18s. Political and Economic Planning. Grow'th in the British Economy; a Study of Economic Problems and Policies in Contemporary Britain. London, Allen & Unwin, 1960. 256pp. 30s. Potter, Allen M. Organized Groups in British National Politics. London, Faber and Faber, 1961. 396pp. 42s. Rowan, Sir Leslie. Arms and Economics; the Changing Challenge. Cambridge, Eng., University Press, 1960. 63pp. 5s. Strang, William Strang, Baron. Britain in World Affairs; the Fluctuation in Power and Influence from Henry VIII to Elizabeth II. New York, Praeger, 1961. 426pp. $6.95 Wheare, Kenneth C. The Constitutional Structure of the Com¬ monwealth. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1960. 201pp. 25s. Woodhouse, Christopher M. British Foreign Policy since the Second World War. London, Hutchinson, 1961. 255pp. 30s. Youngson, A. J. The British Economy, 1920-1957. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1960. 271pp. $4.50
NEAR EAST AND SOUTH ASIA
Ahmed, Jamel M. The Intellectual Origins of Egyptian Nationalism. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 135pp. 25s. Ankara, tlniversite. Dis Miinasebeltler Enstitiisii. Turkey and the United Nations. Prepared for the Carnegie Endowment for Inter¬ national Peace. New York, Manhattan Pub. Co.. 1961. 228pp. $4.00 Banani, Amin. The Modernization of Iran, 1921-1941. Stanford, Calif, Stanford University Press, 1961. 191pp. $5.00 Bauer, Peter T. Indian Economic Policy and Development. New York, Praeger, 1961. 152pp. $4.25 Beling, Willard A. Pan-Arabism and Labor. Cambridge, Distributed for the Center of Middle Eastern Studies of Harvard University by Harvard University Press, 1960. 127pp. $3.00 Conference on India and the United States, Washington, 1959, India and the United States. New York, Macmillan, 1961. 244pp. $5.95 Conference on Middle Eastern Affairs. 14th, Washington, D. C., 1960. The Arab Nation: Paths and Obstacles to Fulfillment . . . Edited by William Sands. Washington, Middle East Institute, 1961. 117pp. $2.00 Ellis, Harry B. Challenge in the Middle East; Communist Influence and American Policy. New York, Ronald Press, 1960. 238pp. $4.00 Franck, Peter G. Afghanistan between East and West. Washington, National Planning Association, 1960. 85pp. $2.00 Frye, Richard N. Iran. 2d ed. London, Allen & Unwin, 1960. 126pp. 12s. Gahrieli, Francesco. The Arab Revival. Translated from the Italian by Lovett F. Edwards. London. Thames and Hudson, 1961. 178pp. $3.95
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Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., Institute of Ethnic Studies. The, Arab Middle East and Muslim Africa. Edited by Tibor Kerekes. New York, Praeger, 1961. 126pp. $4.00 Greenwald, Norman. The Mideast in Focus. Washington, Public Affairs Press, 1960 86pp. $2.50 Hasan, K. Sarwar. Pakistan and the United Nations. Prepared for the Pakistan Institute of International Affairs and the Carnegie En¬ dowment for International Peace. New York, Manhattan Pub. Co., 1960. 328pp. $3.00 HStti, Philip K. The Near East in History, a 5000 Year Story. Princeton, N. J., Van Nostrand, 1961. 574pp. $10.00 Ionides, Michael G. Divide and Lose; the Arab Revolt of 1955-1958. London, Bles, 1960. 272pp. 21s. Jackson, Barbara W. India and the West. New York, Norton, 1961. 256pp. $4.50 Joesten, Joachim. Nasser, the Rise to Power. London. Odhams Press. 1960. 224pp. 21s. Khadduri, Majid. Independent Iraq, 1932-1958; a Study in Iraqi Politics. 2d ed. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 388pp. 45s. Kirk, George E. Contemporary Politics: a Concise History. New York, Praeger, 1961. 231pp. $5.00 Langley, Kathleen M. The Industrialization of Iraq. Cambridge, Distributed for the Center for Middle Eastern Studies of Harvard University by Harvard University Press, 1961. 313pp. $5.50 Lewis, Bernard. The Emergence of Modern Turkey. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1961. 511pp. 48s. Lewis, Geoffrey L. Turkey. 2d rev. ed. New York, Praeger, 1960. 226pp. $6.00 al-Marayati, Abid A. A Diplomatic History of Modern Iraq. New York, R. Speller, 1961. 222pp. $6.00 Marlowe, John. Arab Nationalism and British Imperialism; a Study in Power Politics. New York, Praeger, 1961. 236pp. $6.50 Partner, Peter, A Short Political Guide to the Arab World. New York, Praeger, I960. 141pp. $4.00 Buhner, Alex. The Economy of Israel; a Critical Account of the First Ten Years. New York, Praeger, 1960. 307pp. $5.75 Tavener, L. Ellis. The Revival of Israel, London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1961. 128pp. 12s. Watt, William M. Islam and the Integration of Society. London, Routledge & Paul, 1961. 293pp. 32s. Wilson, Andrew. North from Kabul. London, Allen & Unwin, 1961. 190pp. 25s.
AFRICA
Apter, David E. I he Political Kingdom in Uganda: a Study in Bureaucratic Nationalism. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, 1961. 550pp. $10.00 Ashford, Douglas E. Political Change in Morocco. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, 1961. 432pp. $8.50 Batten, I homas R. Problems of African Development. 3d ed.
| London, Oxford University Press, 1960. 2v. 6s. 6d. each Bourret, F. M. Ghana, the Road to Independence, 1919-1957. Rev. ed. Stanford, Calif., Stanford University Press, 1960. 246pp. $5.75 Brace, Richard M. and Joan Brace. Ordeal in Algeria. Princeton,
! N. J., Van Nostrand, 1960. 453pp. $6.75 Calder, Ritchie. Agony of the Congo. London, Gollancz, 1961. 160pp. 16s. Calvocoressi, Peter. South Africa and World Opinion. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1961. 68pp. 6s. Cameron, James. The African Revolution. London, Thames and Hudson, 1961. 199pp. $3.95 Carney, David E. Government and Economy in British West Africa; a Study of the Role of Public Agencies in the Economic Development of British West Africa in the Period 1947-1955. New York, Bookman Associates, 1961. 207pp. $5.00 Carter, Gwendolen M. Independence for Africa. New York, Praeg¬ er, 1960. 172pp. $4.50 Chidzero, B. T. G. Tanganyika and International Trusteeship. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1961. 286pp. 38s. Cox-George, Noah A. W. Finance and Development in West Africa; the Sierra Leone Experience. London, Dobson, 1961. 333pp. 50s. Creighton, Thomas R. M. The Anatomy of Partnership; Southern Rhodesia and the Central African Federation. London. Faber and Faber, 1960. 258pp. 25s.
46
Duffy, Janies, and Robert A. Manners, eds. Africa Speaks. Princeton, N. J., Van Nostrand, 1961. 223pp. $4.95 Fabunnii, L. A. The Sudan in Anglo-Egyptian Relations; a Case Study in Power Politics, 1800-1956. New York, Longmans, 1960. -166pp. $11.75 Gerster, Georg. Sahara: Desert of Destiny. Tranlated by Stewart Thomson. New York, Coward-McCann, 1961. 302pp. $5.00 Gillespie, Joan. Algeria, Rebellion and Revolution. London, E. Benn, I960. 208pp. $6.75 Gray, Richard. The Two Nations; Aspects of the Development of Race Relations in the Rhodesias and Nyasaland. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 373pp. 42s. Hahn, Iairna. North Africa, Nationalism to Nationhood. Washing¬ ton, Public Affairs Press, 1960. 264pp. $6.00 Hennessy, Maurice N. The Congo; a Brief History and Appraisal. New York, Praeger, 1961. 148pp. $3.50 Huxley. Elspeth. A New Earth. New York, Morrow, 1960. 288pp. $6.00 Ingrains, William H. Uganda: a Crisis of Nationhood. London, H. M. Stationery Off., 1960. 365pp. £1 10s InternationalAfrican Seminar. 1st, Makerere College, 1959. Social Change in Modern Africa; Studies Presented and Discussed. Edited by Aidan Southall. New York, Oxford University Press, 1961. 337pp. $6.40 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The Economic Development of Tanganyika; Report . . . Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1961. 548pp. $8.50 Jahn, Janheinz. Muntu: an Outline of the New African Culture. Translated by Marjorie Grene. New York, Grove Press, 1961. 267pp. $5.50 Karp, Mark. The Economics of Trusteeship in Somalia. Boston, Boston University Press, 1960. 185pp. $4.50 Kimble, George H. T. Tropical Africa. New York, Twentieth Century Fund, 1960. 2v. $15.00 Melady, Thomas P. Profiles of African Leaders. New York, Macmillan, 1961. 186pp. $4.95 Merriam, Alan P. Congo, Background of Conflict. Evanston, 111., Northwestern University Press, 1961. 368pp. $6.00 Oakes, John B. The Edge of Freedom. New York, Harper, 1961. 129pp. $3.50 Philipps, John F. V. Kwame Nkrumah and the Future of Africa. New York, Praeger, 1961. 272pp. $5.50 Phillips, Cecil E. L. The Vision Splendid; the Future of the Cen¬ tral African Federation. London, Heineinann, 1960. 384pp. 25s. Royal Institute of International Affairs. Nigeria; the Political and Economic Background. London, New York, Oxford University Press, I960. 141pp. 6s. Simoons, Frederick J. Northwest Ethiopia; Peoples and Economy. Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1960. 250pp. $5.00 Smythc, Hugh H., and Mabel M. Smythe. The New Nigerian Elite. Stanford, Calif., Stanford University Press, 1960. 196pp. $5.00 Spooner, F. P. South African Predicament. London, J. Cape, 1960. 288pp. 21s. Thompson, Virginia, and Richard Adloff. The Emerging States of French Equatorial Africa. Stanford. Calif., Stanford University Press, 1960. 595pp. $8.75 Tillon, Germaine. France and Algeria: Complementary Enemies. Translated by Richard Howard. New York, Knopf, 1961. 183pp. $3.00 Trevaakis, Gerald K. N. Eritrea: a Colony in Transition: 1941- 1952. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 137pp. 21s. Westphal, Clarence. African Heritage; the Story of Africa’s Con¬ tribution to the World. Minneapolis, Denison, 1960. 247pp. $3.50 Wood, Susan. Kenya: the Tensions of Progress. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 108pp. 6s.
FAR EAST
Champassak, Sisouk Na. Storm over Laos, a Contemporary History. New York, Praeger, 1961. 202pp. $5.00 Chandrasekhar, Sripati. Red China; an Asian View. New York, Praeger, 1961. 230pp. $4.00 Ch’en, Hsi-en. Thought Reform of the Chinese Intellectuals. Lon¬ don, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 247pp. 37s. 6d. Coughlin, Richard J. Double Identity: the Chinese in Modern Thailand. London, Oxford University Press, 1960. 222pp. 37s. 6d.
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Dening, Sir Maberlv E. Japan. New York, Praeger, 1961. 263pp. §5.85 Fall. Bernard B. Street without Joy; Indochina at War, 1946-1954. Harrisburg, Pa., Stackpole, 1961. 322pp. $4.95 Golay, Frank H. The Philippines: Public Policy and National
Economic Development. Ithaca, N. Y., Cornell University Press, 1961. 455pp. $6.75
Human Relations Area Files. Laos; its People, its Society, its Cul¬ ture. New Haven, HRAF Press, 1960. 294pp. $6.50 Isaacs, Harold R. The Tragedy of the Chinese Revolution. 2d rev.
I ed. Stanford, Calif., Stanford University Press, 1961. 392pp. $7.50 Kurzman, Dan. Kishi and Japan; the Search for the Sun. New York, Obolensky, 1960. 394pp. $5.95 Labin, Suzanne. The Anthill; the Human Condition in Communist
; China. Translated from the French by Edward Fitzgerald. New j York, Praeger, 1961. 442pp. $6.75
Lancaster, Donald. The Emancipation of French Indochina. Lon¬ don, New York, Oxford University Press, 1961. 445pp. 45s. Long, Shao Chuan, and Norman D. Palmer. Sun Yat-sen and Communism. New York, Praeger, 1961. 234pp. $6.00 Lifton, Robert J. Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism; a Study of “Brainwashing” in China. New York. Norton, 1961. 510pp. $6.95 Lyons, Gene iYl. Military Policy and Economic Aid; the Korean Case, 1950-1953. Columbus. Ohio State University Press, 1961. 298pp. $4.50 Paanw, Douglas S. Financing Economic Development, the Indo¬ nesian Case. Glencoe, 111., Free Press, 1960. 474pp. $5.00 Patterson, George N. Tibet in Revolt. London, Faber and Faber, 1960. 197pp. 21s. Reischauer, Edwin O., and John K. Fairbank. A History of East Asian Civilization, v.l. East Asia: the Great Tradition. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1960. lv. $8.75 Statler, Oliver. Japanese Inn. New York, Random House, 1961. 365pp. $6.50
48
Taylor, Alastair M. Indonesian Independence and the United Nations. Ithaca, N. Y., Cornell University Press, 1960. 503pp. $7.50 Thubten Jigme Norbu. Tibet is My Country; the Autobiography of Thubten Jigme Norbu, Brother of the Dalai Lama. . . . Translated from the German by Edward Fitzgerald. New York, Dutton, 1961. 264pp. $5.00 Whiting, Allen S. China Crosses the Yalu; the Decision to Enter the Korean War. New York, Macmillan, 1960. 219pp. $7.50 Wolf, Charles, Jr. Foreign Aid: Theory and Practice in Southern Asia. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, 1960. 442pp. $7.50 Wollaston, Nicholas. China in the Morning; Impressions of a Journey through China and Indo-China. New York, Roy Publishers, 1961. 208pp. $5.95
LATIN AMERICA AND THE WEST INDIES
Ayearst, Morley. The British West Indies; the Search for Self- government. New York, New York University Press, 1960. 258pp. $5.00 Benham, Frederic C., and H. A. Holley. A Short Introduction to the Economy of Latin America. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 169pp. 18s. Committee for Economic Development. Cooperation for Progress in Latin America, a Statement on National Policy by the Research and Policy Committee of the Committee for Economic Development. New York, 1961. 56pp. $1.00 Council on Foreign Relations. Social Change in Latin America Today; its Implications for United States Policy by Richard N. Adams and others. New York, Published for the Council on Foreign Relations by Harper, 1960. 353pp. $5.00 Erasmus, Charles J. Man Takes Control; Cultural Development and American Aid. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 1961. 365pp. $6.50 Guerin, Daniel. The West Indies and their Future. London, Dob¬ son, 1961. 192pp. 18s. Herring, Hubert C. A History of Latin America from the Begin¬ nings to the Present. 2d ed., rev. New York, Knopf, 1961. 845pp. $10.75 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The Eco¬ nomic Development of Venezuela; Report. . . . Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1961. 494pp. $8.50 International Economic Association. Economic Development for Latin America; Proceedings of a Conference held by the International Economic Association. Edited by Howard S. Ellis. New York, St. Martin’s Press, 1961. 487pp. $10.00 Karnes, Thomas L. The Failure of Union; Central America, 1824- 1960. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1961. 277pp. $6.00
Kelsey, Vera, and Lilly de Jongh Osborne. Four Keys to Guate¬ mala. Rev. ed. New York, Funk & Wagnalls, 1961. 332pp. $4.50 Linke, Lilo. Ecuador; Country of Contrasts. 3d ed. London, New York, Oxford University Press, 1960. 193pp. 25s. Lowenthal, David. The New West Indies Federation; Perspectives on a New Nation. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 142pp. $3.00 Mathews, Thomas G. Puerto Rican Politics and the New Deal. Gainesville, University of Florida Press, 1960. 345pp. $8.00 Munro, Dana G. The Latin American Republics, a History. 3d ed. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1960. 547pp. $6.75 Poblete Troncoso, Moises, and Ben G. Burnett. The Rise of the Latin American Labor Movement. New York, Bookman Associates, 1960. 179pp. $5.00 Porter, Charles O., and Robert J. Alexander. The Struggle for Democracy in Latin America. New York, Macmillan, 1961. 215pp. $4,50 Tumin, Melvin M., and Arnold S. Feldman. Social Class and Social Change in Puerto Rico. Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press, 1961. 549pp. $10.00 Weyl, Nathaniel. Red Star over Cuba, tire Russian Assault on the Western Hemisphere. New York, Devin-Adair, 1960. 222pp. $4.50 Whetten, Nathan L. Guatemala, the Land and the People. New Haven, Yale University Press, 1961. 399pp. $6.00 Zook, David H., Jr. The Conduct of the Chaco War. New York, Bookman Associates, 1961. 280pp. $6.00
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Notes from a Marine Guard’s Diary
by EDWARD R. PARAUKA
October 1956
IT WAS A chilly, foggy, October morning. A slight breeze wafted across the Danube River blowing away autumn leaves from the tree-lined bank. Through the mist the
bleak outline of the Margit Island bridge could be dis¬ tinguished. In their first floor apartment facing the Danube, 1 was having breakfast with friends and fellow Marines, Bill Comer and Jerry Bolick. We had just finished standing an all-night watch, and though a little bushed, we were ex¬ cited about the revolt that was taking place.
The chatter of burp guns and the crackling of rifles could be heard outside. Occasionally the deadly piercing whoom of a tank gun would shatter the air. Suddenly, only a block away, a burp gun sounded off; men started shouting; more firing followed. Then, just as quickly as it had began, it ceased. This w'as w’ar. This was Budapest, Hungary, 1956.
We kept asking ourselves how could an uprising such as this succeed? The freedom fighters, mostly young boys and girls armed with obsolete rifles, home-made gasoline bombs, and a few machine guns, were pitted against an enemy that had everything it needed for wrar, including the atomic bomb. Even with the sheer guts they showed in the first days of conflict, it seemed impossible for them to win. Yet, strangely enough, it was being done. Russian tanks were being knocked out, Russian soldiers wrere being killed, and the surging tide of victory and freedom was sweeping across the city.
We had watched the huge demonstration that had taken place two days earlier. It was late afternoon. While we stood on the river bank near the Parliament building look¬ ing across the Danube toward the Buda side, we saw thou¬ sands of people parading along the street leading to the Margit Island bridge. As they marched forward, more and more people joined them. After reaching the bridge and crossing it. they swung toward us, heading for Parliament Square just two blocks away from our apartment house.
As they marched by, we could read their banners pro¬ claiming the rights of man and freedom for Hungary. Con¬ spicuous. too, was the true Hungarian flag, the Kossuth em¬ blem in the center, waving proudly and defiantly. More Hungarian flags, the Communist symbol cut from its center, flew7 alongside. On and on the marchers came, a never end¬ ing cavalcade, singing, shouting, pleading for freedom. Freedom from twfelve years of suffering, humiliation, and terror. A rebirth of life seemed to be taking form.
We joined them at Parliament Square. By this time it was dark and torch lights w7ere being lit throughout the crowd. The barrage of outcries continued. Then, surpris¬ ingly, a hush fell over all. Quietly at first, then gaining strength and spirit as each one took up the note, they began to sing the Hungarian National Anthem. A tear came to
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50
Edward Parauka served with the Marine Corps at Paris and Budapest and is currently working part-time and studying at the
1 University of Virginia, preparatory to joining the Foreign Service.
our eyes. For those who have never heard this beautiful and stirring melody, it is difficult to describe, hut once you have, you will never forget it. Glancing around, I could feel resolution and pride in everyone’s voice. Old folks, their tired, wrinkled faces showing the strain of years of hardship, were crying unashamedly as they sang. Young men and women, their heads held high, eyes sparkling brightly, were singing with all their hearts. Mothers, cra¬ dling their babies, were singing and praying fervently that their children would grow up free. Fathers placed their arms firmly around the backs of their sons, sensing perhaps that soon, many young lives would be given to free Hungary.
By this time, we realized that serious trouble lay ahead. Returning to our apartments, we awaited instructions from our Legation. Meanwhile the situation had progressed from a fervent demonstration into a small-scale revolt. After increasing in size and boldness, the crowd in Parliament Square marched down Stalin Ut toward Vidam Park, where, adjoining it, stood Stalin Square. Towering over this square was the enormous iron statue of Joseph Stalin. Insults and stones were thrown at the figure by the people. Then men with aceteylene torches climbed up the pedestal and pro¬ ceeded to cut into the knees of the figure, while others attached chains and ropes to the neck and body. These lines were secured to trucks. When the knees were almost severed, the trucks pulled, and an era came crashing down. A mighty roar of approval rocked the area.
At approximately the same time, in a different part of the city, another crowd, mainly of students, gathered in front of Radio Budapest, the official radio station of Hun¬ gary. They asked access to the station to broadcast their pleas for freedom and help to the outside world, but their wrav was barred bv locked doors and windows and by the hated Secret Police (AVOl inside, armed w'ith machine guns. The determined students were not shaken. One of them, apparently the leader, jumped up on top of a parked automobile nearby. From this post he led the people in their demands and made flaming speeches protesting the Communist regime.
At this decisive moment, in the heat of passionate cries and oration, a short burst of gunfire erupted from a station window, and the fearless young leader, perched high on his makeshift podium, fell dead into the street. Turning upon the radio station with the savagery of an animal gone berserk, the crowd pommeled the walls and broke windows with rocks, bricks, anything they could throw. Eventually, a few who had weapons hidden in their coats, brought them out and fired back, but the AVO, safe inside, con¬ tinued shooting. During this slaughter, the small contingent of Hungarian soldiers, placed in the area to keep order, witnessed with horror the scene before them. Disregarding their Communist indoctrination, they, too, started firing at the radio station.
Word of this action quickly spread through the city. Wherever the AVO were known to be located, the people at¬ tacked them. The government called for more Hungarian solders to quell the uprising, but it couldn’t be done. In¬ stead, some of the troops, who knew well the brutality and ruthlessness of the AVO, joined the resistance movement: while others refused to obey orders to shoot, knowing that their ow n family and friends were among the crowds. Fight¬
ing continued all that night and the following day. Final¬ ly, in the early morn¬ ing hours of Octo¬ ber 24th, the Rus¬ sians stormed in.
By now' the little park directly across the street from our apartment served as a Russian bivouac camp. Trees had been knocked down to make room for equipment and vari¬ ous vehicles, while tank treads and fox¬ holes scarred the earth and streets hideously. Bonfires flamed brightly, sol¬ diers huddled to¬ gether to keep warm and to cook their food. Parked not more than twenty feet away from us stood three armored carriers. We watched the soldiers inside as they cleaned their weapons. Once in a while one would glance at us, then turn quickly away. Looking about, we saw Russian troops everywhere, and to our left, about 300 feet toward Parlia¬ ment Square, a heavy concentration of tanks w'as deploy ed.
At this time a new crowd gathered in Parliament Square, a peaceful and rather restrained group, much different from the ones that marked the first day. Solemnly singing the National Anthem, they were making no aggressive moves either at the Parliament building or at the Russian and AVO troops placed strategically around the square. Sud¬ denly, yvithout warning, a shot wras fired. A woman screamed in agony. More shots followed and scores of men and women fell dead or wounded. The AVO and Russians were deliberately firing into the crowd. It rvas cold-blooded murder. Freedom fighters appeared and started shooting hack, but it couldn t stop the torrent of bullets pouring into the defenseless throng.
During this fire-fight yve were still on our balcony, when unexpectedly from the rooftop above us, bursts of machine gun fire rained down on the Russians below. This caught the troops off-guard and they scrambled for their weapons and cover. We ducked inside and hit the deck just as a fusilade of shots came crashing into the room. While bullets thudded and ricocheted around us, knocking plaster and stone doyvn, Jerry, Bill, and I were shouting at each other to find out if any of us were hit. Fortunately none of us yvas seriously hurt. Crawding over broken glass and brick, I made my way into the bedroom facing the park. Reaching the window I cautiously looked out. The Russians, after raking the entire front side of our apartment house, were now firing at the roof, throwing everything they had against the freedom fighters.
Knowing that more people were in the house, mostly lo¬ cal Hungarian employees, we made our wray to the inside hallwav away from direct fire, and there, each of us checked the different apartments. No one was hurt but a few' were
Above: Maria Teresa area near Killian Barraeks, scene of heaviest fighting. Below : Parliament Square, then and now.
51
DIARY
badly shaken up; we gathered them together and escorted the group down into the basement for safety.
Shooting continued all day. A fire started in one of the apartments, caused, we discovered later, bv a tracer bullet in a sofa. We put out the blaze after a twenty-minute bat¬ tle. The buildings around us were not as lucky as ours. Tanks started blasting into them, demolishing one and badly damaging the rest. For a while we feared the Rus¬ sians might break into our place. Though it would have been a losing fight, we were prepared to defend the women and children with our lives and with what meagre weapons we had. The Russians never came in.
The following morning all personnel had moved to the sanctuary of our Legation. There, under awkward condi¬ tions, quarters were set up for Americans and their de¬ pendents plus a few Hungarians and foreign nationals. Our duty increased in size and responsibility, with double watches around the clock and the off guard performing extra duties day and night. Sleep came to us very rarely and it was luxury to lie down for three or four hours at a time. With all this work we didn’t have any time to venture outside, but passing pedestrians and anonymous phone calls kept us informed of the fighting.
During this period and thereafter, a critical food short¬ age affected us as well as the city. Short rations were the order of the day, but even then, w'e managed to scrape some food together for some of the homeless children and hungry people crying at our door.
During this period we received word that Cardinal Mind- szenty was on his way to ask for sanctuary in our Legation and the staff busily prepared for this event. Then on a cold dark morning he appeared, haggard and tired, and was graciously and respectfully admitted to our protection. The armed escort of Freedom Fighters bid their farewells to His Eminence and cautiously made their way back to where they came from. No Russian or AVO troops interfered.
Then the day of liberation arrived. The freedom fighters had successfully pushed the Russians out of Budapest. It was a day long to be remembered. Prayers of thanks were offered up to God, and prayers were said for the mam
brave Hungarians who died in the bitter conflict. The Kossuth flag flew from every rooftop and balcony and, alongside was draped the black flag of mourning.
Our work-load decreased slightly, so, two at a time, we were allowed outside the Legation. We saw that many of the buildings were badly shot up, some burned out, others were completely flattened. In one area where some of the heaviest fighting took place, it seemed as if a giant had crashed his fist down and squashed everything beneath. Wrecked tanks, trucks, over-turned trolley cars, upturned stone street blocks, marked the scene. Dead Hungarians and Russians dotted the area.
1 he slow process of cleaning up began. Damaged ve¬ hicles w7ere being towed away, dangling trolley wires were cut down, buildings swept clean, and debris in the streets shoveled into trucks to be carried away. In a courtyard off one boulevard captured Russian tanks were being worked over by mechanics. Freedom fighter patrols roved about everywhere searching for hidden AVO agents. Some were found and executed. As a grim reminder that the day of reckoning had arrived, other AVO agents hung from lamposts and trees. In the cleaning up the Hungarians were very thorough.
Around the city the people were working to start a new life. It appeared as if a heavy yoke had been lifted from their backs. They stood straighter than before and spoke with confidence of better things ahead.
All this was destroyed, when, in the early morning hours of November 4th. the Russians returned in full force. The might that was hurled at the brave but out-numbered Hun¬ garians proved too much for any one small nation to with¬ stand. More and bigger tanks, heavy artillery, jet fighters and bombers, thousands of ruthless troops poured into the city, but still, with all this against them, the Magyars fought bitterly. The fighting raged on for a few days, but it was evident that it was a losing battle. A battle that will live through history as a proud victory for Hungary and a shameful defeat for the Soviet Union. Finally, a deathly silence shrouded the city, everyone sensed what had hap¬ pened. The Kossuth flag, the symbol of freedom, flew no more.
“The Uprising” by Daumier (from I he Phillips Collection)
52
Return to Paradise
Once again Tin Can Island is being re¬ settled by its original natives, who defy death by returning to their villages on the brink of an active volcano.
THE SOUTH PACIFIC island of Niua Fo’ou, commonly known as “Tin Can Island,” located midway between
Samoa and Fiji, was once, and will now be again—at least to philatelists—one of the most fascinating islands in the world.
Niua Fo’ou, owing to its small size and insignificant com¬ mercial potentialities, cannot be found on a standard map of the Pacific; it is merely indicated by a pin-prick dot on navigation charts. Up until fifteen years ago, however, Niua Fo’ou was famous as a “stamp-collectors’ island,” because of the primitive manner by which mail from the island was swum by a white mailman and his Tongan postal assistants through shark-infested w aters to passing steamers.
Following a violent volcanic eruption in September 1946, which destroyed the islanders’ villages and gardens, the island’s 1,300 inhabitants were removed from the smolder¬ ing, trembling island and resettled 400 miles to the south on Tongatabu, the central island of the Tongan Group where the famed Queen Salote rules, and also on Eua Island farther southward. From the date of this evacuation stamp brokers and collectors received no more stamps with the coveted can¬ cellation-mark: NIUA FO’OU—TIN CAN MAIL SERVICE.
Wh en the eruption of 1946 subsided, a party of native workers ventured back to Niua Fo’ou to prepare copra from the coconut palms which had not been destroyed by the earth tremors and holocaust; by 1955 fifty men were regu¬ larly visiting the ravaged island in this mission.
In September of 1958 over 200 former Niua Fo’ouans re¬ turned to the devastated island to rebuild permanent vil¬ lages. their devotion to the land of their ancestors overcom¬ ing the terrifying prospect of living on the rim of a treacherous volcano that could explode and spread fiery death in a matter of seconds. By the end of last year 500 Tongans had returned to their island home.
A handsome sub-chief voiced the sentiment of the home¬ coming Tongans when, his bare feet touching the rocky ledge at Agaha, he said happily: “It is so good to be back! This is the island of our ancestors. Their spirits would
Wilmon Menard, free-lance writer, lias just returned from a year- and-a-lialf’s voyage through the South Pacific and is currently finishing work on “Vahine,” a book on Tahiti.
Eruption of Niua Fo’ou in 1946
by WILMON MENARD
wander forlornly on the night winds if they thought we had deserted them forever.”
At this writing, most of the Niua Fo’ouans have returned, and the charred or effaced villages are being quickly re¬ stored; life is returning to normal, and singing is heard in the groves and along the rocky beaches. And, important to the outside world, of which these natives have only a remote conception despite the global demand for their valuable stamps, the aquatic mail service has been revived again.
Although Niua Fo’ou is the ancestral island of Queen Salote, its background of history is negligible. It was thought to have been discovered by the Dutch explorer Schouten in 1616, who named it Isle of Good Hope. Its next sighting was on the morning of August 3rd, 1791, by the British frigate Pandora under command of Captain Edwards, who was re¬ turning to England with sixteen of the mutineers of H.M.S. Bounty, whom he had captured on Tahiti’s beaches. He sailed the Pandora slowly around the volcanic cone’s 25-mile circumference, endeavoring to find a suitable cove for anchorage. Rising sheer from the blue Pacific in strange isolation, its shape suggesting an ornate hat, the island presented only an ominous aspect. The entire coastline was ringed by a high wdiite ruff of surf where the angry seas smashed against ledges and sheer basalt cliffs. And from numerous craters sulphurous smoke spiralled skyward.
CAPTAIN EDWARDS nervously gave the order to head away from the forbidding shores. But he did make his report
on Niua Fo’ou to the Admiralty. However, as his log indi¬ cated that there was a deceptive heavy set of the currents and treacherous shoals, holding also the threat of volcanic disturbances, his Niua Fo’ou landfall was considered of no importance, and promptly forgotten.
Niua Fo’ou Island is about 3% miles long by 3 wide, merely a precipitous circlet of land surrounding a lake 2% miles in diameter. The islanders are a thrifty, agricultural race of Polynesians, but with a great capacity7 for humor, singing, dancing and sitting around the Arapa-bowl and philosophizing. In appearance they are attractive, resem¬ bling the Maoris of New Zealand and the Samoans. They are tall, superbly formed, with handsome, regular features, dark liquid eves, golden-brown complexions, and gentle, friendly dispositions. And most of the women are beauties.
53
RETURN TO PARADISE
Envelope and stamp, with
There is practically no disease, crime, poverty or discord on Niua Fo’ou.
It was a rare event when a pas¬ senger was landed at Niua Fo’ou, and then it was usually
prized cancellation a tindei or mission¬ ary returning from
a vacation or business trip to Tongatabu. And the land¬ ing was always very tricky and dangerous. The steamer just moved dead slow in the offing; and a surf-boat, manned by husky Tongans, put out from the rocks at Agaha to col¬ lect the human cargo. But frequently the long-boat was tossed high on the combers and crashed on rocky fangs of the cove, whereupon the battered, terrified passenger, more drowned than alive, was tossed up on a ledge, where the natives retrieved him. most times minus his cherished luxury purchases.
The credit of inaugurating the “Tin Can Mail Service” belongs to Charles Stewart Ramsay, a Britisher, who was ap¬ pointed some years ago to the Niua Fo’ou trading-post of Mor ris Hedstrom Company. Ramsay, or “Lamisi” as the natives called him, was an avid reader and letter-writer, and he quickly realized that the receipt and dispatch of mail and reading-matter at Niua Fo’ou presented almost insurmount¬ able obstacles.
Then, a chance observation solved the dilemma. In his own words, “One day I was watching some natives making their way down to the rocks with their buoyant swimming- poles of fan (hibiscus) wood to go fishing. A heavy swell was running, and I wondered how they would get into the water. After a few minutes of watching the waves as they roared in, the natives suddenly seized their poles, threw them into the backwash, and immediately followed. I lost sight of the men in the surging white foam, but soon the)
In calmer weather outrigger canoes handle the mail from passing steamers. Usually, however, the surf is too great and a swimmer with a hibiscus pole carries the mail.
appeared a little distance out, where they again secured their wooden floats. The towering white crest of the close follow¬ ing wave imminently threatened the natives with destruction on the rocks, and 1 held my breath. There was a flashing glimpse of strong brown arms, and the poles sailed into the air over the white crest. Then the swimmers dived beneath the roaring monster in front of them, to reappear beyond the danger zone of tile breaking waves. I said to myself: ‘Now, why can’t I do that?’ ”
So Ramsay made his first swim to deliver and collect mail, periodicals and books from the regularly passing Tofua of the Union Steamship Company of New Zealand. He came aboard on this initial experiment, yarned with the captain, and then executed a splendid swan-dive from the high bow of the vessel.
When his head broke the surface, Captain Davey of the Tofua foghorned down: “Not bad, my boy!” Then, with the showman's instinct, added: “You’d better do that every time and we ll soon get ourselves talked about! And remember, even if you send someone out in a boat, you’ll have to swim out. or 1 II be called a liar by all the passengers aboard! G’bye!”
Ramsay, a slight man, and considered at this time only a fair swimmer, gained the reputation over the next few years as being the greatest white swimmer in the South Seas— and one of the bravest. His route to and from Niua Fo’ou to the Tofua was through waters in which the fins of tenifa, or man-eating sharks, made ominous cut-waters. And, head¬ ing out to the waiting steamer, to misjudge hy so much as a second or bare inch a plunge off the rocks at Agaha-landing between a crashing comber and the strong ebbing, meant instant death.
Now and again it was too stormy for Ramsay and his native jjostal assistants to brave the strong cross-currents, and the steamers were forced to drop over the mail tins, in the hope that they would float ashore. Frequently, the strong westerly currents carried the containers to Fiji’s beaches, and even beyond to the shores of the New Hebrides Islands.
Ramsay braved the roughest seas for his prized letters and reading-matter. And it was handled in this manner: the outward mail from Niua Fo’ou was made up ashore into several parcels, wrapped in oiled waterproof paper, and tied to the ends of sticks about three feet in length. Two or three Tongans, depending on the amount of mail on hand, ac¬ companied Ramsay out to the steamers, each with a stick topped by its parcel of mail and their bodies supported by six-to-seven-foot-long fait poles, which were very buoyant and easily carried the weight of a recumbent body. These parcels were placed in the buckets reeled down from the deck of the steamer, and the 40-lb biscuit tins, containing the inward mail and literature, which the ship’s carpenter had previously sealed, were then lowered or tossed over¬ board to the swimming mailmen.
And so, because of this unique mail service, Niua Fo’ou was dubbed “Tin Can Island.”
But. getting back to Ramsay, the original mail-swimmer of “Tin Can Island." he did have his brushes with near death.
There was the terrifying dark night when the Tofua's skipper, thinking that Ramsay and his native assistant Biutau were wrell clear of the hull, signalled the engine-room to get
54
underway. The vessel swung abruptly around, and Biutau, caught in the ship’s turbulent wake and about to be mangled j by the whirling propellors, shouted to Ramsay: “Lamisi, tokoni mai teu mate! Ramsay, help me, or I shall die!”
Ramsay later described the harrowing experience:
“Biutau was helpless to save himself, and Heaven only knows what I thought I could do to save him; but, flinging aside my swimming-pole, I instinctively struck out for him with ail speed. 1 yelled with all the strength of my lungs: ‘Ahoy, the bridge! For God’s sake, stop the engines!’
“When I reached Biutau, the stern was almost upon us. In spite of our frenzied efforts to escape, it swept, like a Juggernaut, inexorably nearer. Then, in a panic of fear, we felt the drag of the propellers and foresaw ourselves being sucked to an awful death, gashed and ripped by the thrash¬ ing blades.
“‘Let the tin go!’ I gasped to Biutau, as we fought the deadly undertow. The mail-tin, released from our hands, was pulled past our shoulders to the propellers and sucked down out of sight.
“Then, there came one of the grandest sounds that has ever reached my ears, the engine-room telegraph signalling —Stop! Only a second saved us. As the impetus of the steamer carried her overhanging stern like a roof above our heads, the blades of the now motionless propellers actually bumped us in the dark!”
It was only by a miracle that the Chief Officer of the Tojua, about to signal Full Speed Ahead!—which would have spelled a horrible mutilated death to the two swim¬ mers—heard Ramsay’s faint cries!
Perhaps the adventures of Ramsay and his native postal assistants will add more interest and importance to the Niua Fo’ou stamps, which some older collectors already have in their albums, no doubt cancelled and brought out by Ramsay and his Tongan swimmers through storm-lashed, shark-patrolled seas.
But for younger philatelists, whose page on Tonga’s Tin Can Island has only blank squares, it is suggested that they write to the Postmaster, Tongan Post Office, Nukualofa, tonga-tabu, Tongan Islands, enclosing an envelope and sufficient postage in the form of an International Postal Coupon (obtainable at any post office) for information on how they can get the stamp from the famous stamp collec¬ tors’ paradise island of Niua Fo’ou.
Freighter in Lagos Harbor br K. Simpson
PERSONAL PROPERTY INSURANCE WITH A DIFFERENCE
Right now, if you like, and certainly before you make your next move, clip the coupon below for details about the Gov¬ ernment Service Comprehensive Policy—a new standard in
personal property protection.
You get world-wide, all risk protection that never has to be
rewritten when you move . . . limited ocean transit coverage
. . . and other benefits, all in one policy.
And you can add overseas liability protection and accidental
death indemnity to the same policy—if you wish.
Mail the coupon, or phone today for complete information
about the convenience, security and economy of the
GOVERNMENT SERVICE COMPREHENSIVE POLICY Underwritten by Lloyds of London
J. BLAISE DE SIBOUR & CO., Dept. 406 1700 Eye Street, N.W., Washington 6, D. C. ME 8-3996
Send me without obligation complete information about the GOVERNMENT SERVICE COMPREHENSIVE POLICY writ¬ ten especially for Foreign Service families.
Name (please print)
A ddress
City Zone State Country
CHANGING YOUR POST?
Please help us keep our mailing list up-to-date by indicating to the Circulation Dept, of the JOURNAL changes in address, in advance when possible. APO or FPO address should be mentioned if applicable.
55
Pseudonyms may be used only if the original letter includes
the writer's correct name. Anonymous letters are neither pub¬
lished nor read. All letters are subject to condensation. The
opinions of the writers are not intended to indicate the official
views of the Department of State, or of the Foreign Service
as a whole.
“One of the Roving Kind”
THE AUGUST, 1961, issue of the JOURNAL carried an unsigned arti¬
cle entitled “One of the Roving Kind” pointing up in a humorous and yet revealing manner the apparent undue personal preoccupation of the vast majority of officers in the Service with political reporting as contrasted to evi¬ dent aversion for other functions, par¬ ticularly administrative. Unlike the author, whose passion for anonymity may he based more on defense than modesty, I feel the article is of such accurate and clear insight that I have clipped it for possible appropriately- timed reference to future rating officers, inspectors, etc!
M. LEE COTTERMAN
Ciudad Trujillo
“Snoopers and Sniffers”
GERALD A. DREW, Inspector General, in the August NEWS LETTER,
states that “Happily gone are the days when an inspector swooped out of the underbrush onto the trembling Consul, locked the doors, checked the fee stamps and counted the cash.”
I regret to say that my friend of many years has not given the whole story about the inspectors of olden times. Jerry failed to mention how thoroughly those “dead-eye Dicks” were trained before they hit the trail. For a first assignment they were given a bunch of detective stories to read. Then they were sent to a famous de¬ tective agency for three months train¬ ing, during which time they were not allowed to communicate with the out¬ side world or even with each other.
Before leaving Washington, each in¬ spector was handed a kit containing two pairs of gumshoes, a regulation slouch hat, a pair of Greta Garbo glasses, brass knuckles, and a star¬ shaped badge. At the same time he was warned never to register at a hotel under his real name.
Upon arrival at a post the inspector at once began to snoop and sniff around town in search of choice, juicy tidbits of gossip about the American Consul; he would then barge into the Consul’s office unannounced, turn back the lapel of his coat, hand a questionnaire to the Consul and proceed to throw him off
balance by asking him to open up the safe without consulting with the mes¬ senger. (He was a snoopy fellow, all right. Why the wife of one inspector once confided that her husband even inspected her bureau drawers.)
JAMES B. STEWART A Former Swooper Downer
Denver
*A few of them were: Charles Eberhardt, Ralph Totten, Bill Dawson, Tom Wilson, Pen Davis, Klahr Huddle, Monnett Davis, Merle Cochran and Jake Jacobs.
International Affairs Center
THE JUNIOR Foreign Service Officers Club is keenly interested in the
progress of the proposed Center for International Affairs. For the past year we have been actively working to im¬ prove the opportunities for junior For¬ eign Service officers to get acquainted with their foreign counterparts in the Embassies in Washington. We have found out that it is not too difficult to meet our younger colleagues if a little effort is expended, but for many rea¬ sons, all too familiar to most Foreign Service officers, we have found it diffi¬ cult to see and entertain our friends regularly on an individual basis. Dis¬ tance, cramped living quarters, the difficulties in preparing a dinner and taking care of the children at the same time all make it difficult for many of us to do much entertaining, even of a simple nature, in our own homes.
The proposed Center for Internation¬ al Affairs, with facilities which we could use for entertaining our foreign guests on a relatively inexpensive basis, would be an ideal locus for the junior Foreign Service officer who wishes to get together with his foreign counter¬ parts with some regularity. It is sig¬ nificant that a number of our foreign friends have also lamented the lack of some place, such as the proposed Cen¬ ter, to which they could repair to mee.t their counterparts in the Department of State and other embassies.
The Junior Foreign Service Officers Club (JFSOC) gladly adds its voice to those who call for as speedy action as possible to bring this long needed Center into reality.
FRANCIS J. MCNEIL
Washington
Career Chiefs of Missions FROM TIME to time the Foreign Serv¬ ice NEWS LETTER used to publish a
list of the Chiefs of American Diplo¬ matic Missions, with an indication of the percentage of these Missions head¬ ed by Career Foreign Service Officers. I have not seen such a list appear since sometime last year, and I imagine many of my colleagues are curious, like me, to know where the Career Foreign Service now stands in this regard.
Can you publish for us the present proportion of Career FSO’s among the Chiefs of U. S. Diplomatic Missions?
KENEDON STEINS Managua Editor s Note:
Readers by now will have seen the JOURNAL’S editorial “U.S. Envoys on the New Frontier” in our August issue and noted that approximately 72 per¬ cent of the Missions will be headed by career officers.
Foreign Service Anecdotes You MIGHT wish to consider the creation of a new column called
“Foreign Service Anecdotes.” I have one to contribute to this column should it be created:
At the meeting of Foreign Ministers of the American Republics in 1951, in Washington, the then Secretary of State, Dean Acheson, overheard a Latin American Ambassador voicing a famil¬ iar complaint to three of his colleagues that they did not have enough regular contact with the Secretary of State. Mr. Acheson asked that an appointment be made for the Ambassador to call on him. As Desk Officer, I approached the Ambassador (the late Felix Nieto del Rio, of Chile), set up the appointment, and asked what he wished to discuss with the Secretary. I was given a list of four subjects and prepared the customary briefing memorandum for the Secretary.
On the day of the meeting, the Am¬ bassador indicated his pleasure and in¬ terest in having the interview with the Secretary. But it became evident that the Ambassador was more interested in the interview than in the subject matter, for he raised only three of the questions listed. However, Mr. Ache¬ son, a rapid reader with a retentive memory, had read the briefing memo carefully and answered all four.
MILTON BARALL
Washington
56
Pseudonyms may be used only if the original letter includes
the writer's correct name. Anonymous letters are neither pub¬
lished nor read. All letters are subject to condensation. The
opinions of the writers are not intended to indicate the official
vietcs of the Department of State, or of the Foreign Service
as a whole.
Community Services WITH THE full support of the President and the Secretary, the
Department is again lending its re¬ sources to the United Givers Fund Cam¬ paign.
The 1961 goal for the entire commu¬ nity has been set at $7,800,000—an in¬ crease of 8.3 percent over that of 1960. The increase reflects the augmented requirements of the growing Metropoli¬ tan area for the services rendered by the 148 agencies participating in this appeal for funds. Among the better known of these agencies are the Boy and Girl Scouts, the Family Service and the Mental Health Associations, the YM and YWCA’s. Many others provide home and institutional medical care, specialized care for children and the aged, and recreational facilities for young people and the Armed Services.
The availability, in adequate measure, of this wide range of medical and social assistance within the community which is or may become our home is probably of vital concern to us all. The need for these services is not restricted to any one social or economic segment of our community. Their support through voluntary, private contributions is in the best traditions of our society.
Response during previous drives from personnel associated with the Depart¬ ment in Washington and at foreign posts amply documents the high sense of community responsibility which pre¬ vails among the large majority of our co-workers. State has exceeded its assigned quotas in all five of the preced¬ ing campaigns.
I earnestly invite early and generous pledges and gifts again this year, so that our now traditional level of contri¬ bution may be achieved not only ex¬ peditiously, but with 100 percent of staff participation.
GEORGE C. MCGHEE Vice Chairman
UNITED GIVERS FUND
Washington
Rigorous Requirements IN HIS REVIEW of “The Foreign Serv¬ ice of the United States, Origin, De¬
velopment, and Functions,” in the Au¬ gust 1961 JOURNAL, Ted Achilles notes that “in the early days” one consul was dismissed because the Department had heard nothing from him for seven years (at least one despatch a year was ex¬ pected).
By 1838 the requirements had be¬ come more rigorous. In that year the
Booklet of General Instructions to the Consuls and Commercial Agents of the United States contained the provision that—“The consuls are expected once in three months to write to the Depart¬ ment if it be for no other purpose than that of apprising the Department of their being at their respective posts. They are not required to write oftener unless in emergency cases or when in¬ terest or business points out the pro¬ priety of more frequent communica-
CARL W. STROM Director Foreign Service Institute
Washington
“General Tone” I WOULD LIKE to mention that over the past year and a half, the general
tone and level of your articles has im¬ proved in no small measure.
Specifically, there has been a con¬ siderable increase in the number of articles from university, state, and political sources dealing with the more appealing and very much more stimu¬ lating topics of political philosophy, USA-images abroad, evaluations on our challenges, and serious steps being taken to meet them—and their mean¬ ings and implications for the Depart¬ ment.
Keep up the good work; the public, including myself, needs prodding on these matters; even in addition to the New York TIMES, Henry Kissinger, and FOREIGN AFFAIRS.
JOHN R. BROOKS
Port Chester, N. Y.
Garbellable Goods THE FOLLOWING item from “The Story of the City Companies,” by
P. H. Ditchfield, might interest those who are constantly perplexed with the never-ending effort to decipher garbles:
Another lucrative office was granted to the Grocers, an old com¬ pany of the City of London, that of the Garbeller of Spices. The Gar- beller had the right of search and could enter the shops of trades¬ men and examine drugs and garble them, i.e., to cleanse and purify them. The following goods were said to be garbellable: nutmegs, mace, cinnamon, ginger, gauls, rice and currants, cloves, grains, worm- seed, aniseed, cumminseed, dates, senna and other things.
ALFRED WELLS
London
“Concordia Maritale” Tiepolo (1696-1770) (Currently at the National Art Gallery)
Hole in One READERS OF THE JOURNAL would probably be interested in learn¬
ing that crack golfer Bob Ryan (Em¬ bassy Executive Officer) made a hole- in-one on the 200 yard tenth hole at the Marly Country Club (near Paris) on Sunday, August 6, 1961. Bob was play¬ ing in a foursome at the time and his tremendous feat was witnessed by Car¬ men Pasquale, Vic Keay and the under¬ signed Ted Allen.
TED ALLEN Paris
• A Peasant in Cloak and Tall Hat” Tiepolo